Paper Mill to Pay Nearly $250K for Michigan Fish Kill
A paper mill in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula has agreed to pay nearly $250,000 to settle an investigation of a fish kill in the Escanaba River, state regulators said.
A “catastrophic pipe failure” at the Verso Corp. site in Escanaba resulted in a discharge of partially treated wastewater in August 2020, regulators said.
The mill generates a pollutant known as “black liquor,” which typically is burned as an energy source, the Michigan environment department said.
The river was deprived of oxygen, and fish _ pike, bass, walleye and others _ were killed for three miles. The Escanaba River runs for 52 miles from Marquette County to Lake Michigan.
Verso, based in Miamisburg, Ohio, will pay $244,000 in civil penalties and natural resource damages, the state said.
An email seeking comment was sent to the company Thursday.
The Escanaba mill has been making paper since 1911.
- Experian: AI Agents Could Overtake Human Error as Major Cause of Data Breaches
- Adjusters Launch ‘CarFax for Insurance Claims’ to Vet Carriers’ Damage Estimates
- Wildfires, Storms Fuel 2025 Insured Losses of $108 Billion: Munich Re Report
- Warburg Mulls $1 Billion Sale of London Insurance Broker McGill