Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Kingston-Fossil-Plant-Coal-Ash-Spill-Anniversary-Documentation-27MZIFI3P5GC.htmlConceptually similarKingston Fossil Plant Coal Ash Spill Anniversary DocumentationGP029QDCompleted★★★★Kingston Fossil Plant Coal Ash Spill Anniversary DocumentationGP029OJCompleted★★★★Kingston Fossil Plant Coal Ash Spill Anniversary DocumentationGP029PNCompleted★★★★Kingston Fossil Plant Coal Ash Spill Anniversary DocumentationGP029POCompleted★★★★Kingston Fossil Plant Coal Ash Spill Anniversary DocumentationGP029PPCompleted★★★★Kingston Fossil Plant Coal Ash Spill Anniversary DocumentationGP029PQCompleted★★★★Kingston Fossil Plant Coal Ash Spill Anniversary DocumentationGP029PSCompleted★★★★Kingston Fossil Plant Coal Ash Spill Anniversary DocumentationGP029PTCompleted★★★★Kingston Fossil Plant Coal Ash Spill Anniversary DocumentationGP029PUCompleted★★★★View AllGP029Q8Kingston Fossil Plant Coal Ash Spill Anniversary DocumentationA sign on the door of a former home on Swan Pond Circle destroyed by the December 2008 coal ash spill disaster shows it's now owned by the Tennessee Valley Authority's Kingston Fossil Plant.Locations:Harriman-North America-Tennessee-United States of AmericaDate:10 Dec, 2009Credit:© Wade Payne / GreenpeaceMaximum size:5184px X 3456pxKeywords:Climate (campaign title)-Coal-fired power stations-Day-Kingston Fossil Plant-KWCI (GPI)-Outdoors-Pollution-Signs-Sunny-Toxics (campaign title)-WinterShoot:TVA Coal Fly Ash Slurry Spill Anniversary (USA)One year after a dyke collapse caused a million gallons of toxic coal fly ash sludge to bury homes and farmland and flow into the Emory and Tennessee rivers, cleanup of the site is underway. The coal ash pond at the Tennessee Valley Authorities Kingston Fossil Plant in Harriman, Tenn., collapsed Dec. 22, 2008.