New PCS Phosphates Ads in Carteret County News-Times
Two new PCS Phosphates ads in Carteret County News-Times:
2011-08-07-Carteret-County-News-Times – PCS Ads “One Essential Element” [safety] and “A Commitment to Transparency”
From “A Commitment to Transparency”:
“Some Options We’re Exploring … As we take this step back, some of the options we are exploring include:
- Building a sulfur handling and melting operation at one of several ports in states adjacent to North Carolina.
- Building a suitable facility outside the U.S. to handle formed solid sulfur and melting.
- Building a solid sulfur handling facility at the Port of Morehead City that will supply formed solid sulfur to a melting facility to be located at our facility in Aurora.”
Previous Ads:
2011-07-24 Carteret County News Times – PCS Four Page Glossy Insert “PotashCorp”
2011-07-17 Carteret County News Times – Setting the Record Straight… PCS Phosphates Full Page Ad
NC gov’s Morehead City speech raises eyebrows
MOREHEAD CITY, N.C. — A spokeswoman for Gov. Beverly Perdue says the Democrat is aware of the potential for a sulfur pellet warehouse in North Carolina but did not mention it during a recent speech in Morehead City because there are no formal plans in place.
Perdue said earlier this week that PCS Phosphates was canceling plans for a sulfur melting plant, an announcement lauded by community members who had opposed it.
Before the announcement Wednesday evening, the governor’s office provided her prepared remarks to The Associated Press. A governor spokesman also verified that the information was OK to use after the speech was under way.
However, the politician did not mention that during her actual speech, leading some activists to wonder whether the governor was hiding information when she spoke.
Clean County Coalition vice president Leigh Johnson said area residents believe the original plans for the sulfur melting plant and warehouse had been cloaked in secrecy, and they are sensitive to any hint other projects may be moving ahead without public comment.
News of the planned sulfur melting plant became public last month, a year after PCS Phosphates and the ports authority began receiving permits for the project. Citizens objected, claiming the melting plant posed a threat to air and water quality and that moving dry sulfur pellets in and out of storage could cause the volatile chemical to explode.
Perdue spokeswoman Chrissy Pearson said lacking formal warehouse plans, the governor decided to not mention the warehouse in her actual speech. Pearson said the governor is aware a warehouse may be proposed and would be needed for any melting operation.
She says Perdue often diverges from prepared remarks.
PCS spokeswoman Michelle Vaught said the company is reconsidering all its plans for the Morehead City Port.
Original Story posted in the News & Observer (along with any reader comments)
Sulfur saga
NewsObserver.com
Published on Thu Jul 28 02:00:00 EDT 2011
Eastern North Carolina has had a long, productive but not always comfortable relationship with the company that wanted to intensify its operations at the Morehead City state port with a facility to melt sulfur.
Coastal outcry stops sulfur project
NewsObserver.com
Published on Thu Jul 28 02:00:00 EDT 2011
The public outcry over plans to build a sulfur melting plant on state port land near Morehead City’s waterfront has killed the project.
Company abandons plans to build sulfur plant in Morehead City
NewsObserver.com
Published on Wed Jul 27 17:35:00 EDT 2011
A company has withdrawn its plans to build a sulfur-melting plant at the state port in Morehead City in the face of public opposition, Gov. Bev Perdue announced this afternoon.
Sulfur processing off the table for Morehead City
NewsObersver.com
Published on Wed Jul 27 17:31:57 EDT 2011
A Canadian company has agreed to withdraw plans for a proposed sulfur-processing plant in Morehead City after Gov. Beverly Perdue intervened and agreed to help PCS Phosphates look for another site, the governor said Wednesday.
Plans for sulfur plant at Morehead City raise a stink
NewsObserver.com
Published Sun, Jul 24, 2011 03:47 AM
BY JAY PRICE AND MANDY LOCKE – Staff Writers
In the few weeks since it was made public, the plan for a smokestack-topped sulfur melting plant has set Carteret County abuzz with near-apocalyptic talk of government conspiracies, rotten-egg stenches and the potential of industrial explosions.





