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Aerial imagery of the Michoud Air Products New Orleans 2005 Hurricane Katrina.
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Aerial imagery of the Michoud Air Products. Comparative imagery maps of New Orleans. Comparative overview imagery of the Michoud Assembly Facility and Michoud Air Products pre- and post-Katrina.

Hurricane Katrina
New Orleans Imagery
New Orleans Flooding Overview
New Orleans Levees Imagery
Superdome Imagery
New Orleans Maps
Avondale Shipyard, LA, Imagery
Michoud Air Products Imagery
Michoud Assembly Facility Imagery
Biloxi, MS, Imagery
Pascagoula, MS, Imagery
Ingalls Shipyard, MS, Imagery
Katrina Overview Imagery

Michoud Air Products :: http://www.ombwatch.org/article/articleview/3088

Published: 09/09/2005

Clean Toxic Risks in New Orleans Following Hurricane Katrina

OMB Watch Statement in the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina

Toxic Chemical Sites in New Orleans

This page contains major sites that store, use, or produce large quantities of toxic chemicals within Orleans, Plaquemines, and St. Bernard Parishes. OMB Watch created this page by merging four Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) databases, which OMB Watch makes publicly available through its project RTK NET (the Right-To-Know Network). Click here for details on the databases.

OMB Watch does not claim that all of these sites have been affected by Hurricane Katrina or the ensuing flooding. In addition, this page does not cover non-point sources of pollution (e.g. leaks from cars or sewers), pollution sources that are not toxic chemicals (e.g. waste from sewage treatment plants), or small sources (e.g. underground storage tanks at gas stations). For a list of small sources, please click here.

In the aftermath of Katrina, the combination of chemical releases from smaller and non-point sources may be more hazardous then releases from large sources listed on this page. There may also be large sources that are missing from the databases we consulted. Nonetheless, we hope this webpage will be useful to disaster responders, media, activists, and anyone else concerned over potential chemical releases that threaten the health and safety of those in the area.
http://www.ombwatch.org/article/articleview/3088

 
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