EcoWatch
Facebook 568k Twitter 233k Instagram 41k Subscribe Subscribe
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Conservation
  • Food + Agriculture
  • Renewables
  • Oceans
  • Policy
  • Insights + Opinion
  • Go Solar Today
      • Top Companies By State
        • California Solar Companies
        • Texas Solar Companies
        • New York Solar Companies
        • Florida Solar Companies
        • See All States
      • Top Incentives By State
        • California Solar Incentives
        • Texas Solar Incentives
        • New York Solar Incentives
        • Florida Solar Incentives
        • See All States
      • Solar Panel Costs By State
        • Solar Panel Costs in California
        • Solar Panel Costs in Texas
        • Solar Panel Costs in New York
        • Solar Panel Costs in Florida
        • See All States
      • Value of Solar by State
        • Is Solar Worth It In California?
        • Is Solar Worth It in Texas?
        • Is Solar Worth It New York?
        • Is Solar Worth It In Florida?
        • See All States
      • Company Reviews
        • Tesla Solar Review
        • Sunrun Solar Review
        • SunPower Solar Review
        • Vivint Solar Review
        • See All Companies
      • Common Solar Questions
        • Can You Get Free Solar Panels?
        • Does Solar Increase Home Value?
        • What’re The Best Solar Batteries?
        • Can You Finance Solar?
        • Where To Buy Solar Panels?
        • Payback On Solar Panels?
      • Solar Resources
        • Interactive Solar Calculator
        • Federal Solar Tax Credit 2023
        • Best Solar Panels For Most Homes
        • Tesla Solar Roof Review
        • Cheapest Solar Panels
      • Companies Compared
        • SunPower vs Tesla Solar
        • SunRun vs Tesla Solar
        • SunRun vs SunPower
        • SunPower vs Momentum Solar
        • SunPower vs ADT Solar
EcoWatch
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Conservation
  • Food + Agriculture
  • Renewables
  • Oceans
  • Policy
  • Insights + Opinion
  • Go Solar Today
    • Go Solar Today
    • Top Companies By State
      • California Solar Companies
      • Texas Solar Companies
      • New York Solar Companies
      • Florida Solar Companies
      • See All States
    • Top Incentives By State
      • California Solar Incentives
      • Texas Solar Incentives
      • New York Solar Incentives
      • Florida Solar Incentives
      • See All States
    • Solar Panel Costs By State
      • Solar Panel Costs in California
      • Solar Panel Costs in Texas
      • Solar Panel Costs in New York
      • Solar Panel Costs in Florida
      • See All States
    • Value of Solar by State
      • Is Solar Worth It In California?
      • Is Solar Worth It in Texas?
      • Is Solar Worth It New York?
      • Is Solar Worth It In Florida?
      • See All States
    • Company Reviews
      • Tesla Solar Review
      • Sunrun Solar Review
      • SunPower Solar Review
      • Vivint Solar Review
      • See All Companies
    • Common Solar Questions
      • Can You Get Free Solar Panels?
      • Does Solar Increase Home Value?
      • What’re The Best Solar Batteries?
      • Can You Finance Solar?
      • Where To Buy Solar Panels?
      • Payback On Solar Panels?
    • Solar Resources
      • Interactive Solar Calculator
      • Federal Solar Tax Credit 2023
      • Best Solar Panels For Most Homes
      • Tesla Solar Roof Review
      • Cheapest Solar Panels
    • Companies Compared
      • SunPower vs Tesla Solar
      • SunRun vs Tesla Solar
      • SunRun vs SunPower
      • SunPower vs Momentum Solar
      • SunPower vs ADT Solar

The best of EcoWatch right in your inbox. Sign up for our email newsletter!

    • About EcoWatch
    • Contact EcoWatch
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Learn About Solar Energy
    Facebook 568k Twitter 233k Instagram 41k
    EcoWatch
    • About EcoWatch
    • Contact EcoWatch
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Learn About Solar Energy
    Facebook 568k Twitter 233k Instagram 41k
    Home Business

    Musk’s Boring Company Wants to Dump Wastewater in Texas River, Worrying Local Residents

    By: Olivia Rosane
    Published: March 24, 2023
    Edited by Chris McDermott
    Facebook icon Twitter icon Pinterest icon Email icon
    The Colorado River flowing under a bridge in Bastrop, Texas
    The Colorado River flowing under a bridge in Bastrop, Texas. fstop123 / iStock / Getty Images Plus
    Why you can trust us

    Founded in 2005 as an Ohio-based environmental newspaper, EcoWatch is a digital platform dedicated to publishing quality, science-based content on environmental issues, causes, and solutions.

    Facebook icon Twitter icon Pinterest icon Email icon

    Residents of a Texas city outside of Austin are concerned about Elon Musk’s plans for their river water. 

    Musk’s The Boring Company works to quickly dig tunnels for freight, utility and transportation in the hopes of relieving urban congestion. In the process, it’s seeking a permit to release more than 140,000 gallons of treated wastewater into a river near its Bastrop, Texas, facility every day.

    “This wastewater permit is a big deal,” Bastrop resident Chap Ambrose, who also lives across the street from the company’s chief construction site, said at a public hearing on the permit request Tuesday, as HuffPost reported. “I just don’t trust this company to build public infrastructure based on what I see.”

    The Boring Company first set up shop in Bastrop two years ago. Since then, Ambrose’s empty block has transformed into a 24-hour construction site. 

    “It’s definitely a radical change,” Ambrose told KVUE.

    More From EcoWatch
    • Is Texas Good for Solar Energy?
    • What Is Community Solar?
    • How to Conserve Energy

    In those same two years, the company has also already violated several regulations, as Bloomberg reported in June of 2022. It housed employees in mobile homes without sewage facilities, installed three silos without air quality or stormwater permits and built a driveway without approval then pushed back on safety requests to add space for vehicles to access the road.

    “[It’s] extremely unusual, especially for a major company like that, to basically ignore state safety laws,” Austin-based transportation consultant Lyndon Henry told Bloomberg. “I would think it reflects very badly on them to be ignoring safety regulations regarding something as simple and elementary as an access driveway.”

    Which is why many residents were skeptical when Boring affiliate Gapped Bass LLC applied for a permit in July of 2022 to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) to pour as many as 142,500 gallons of treated wastewater into the Colorado River each day, as KXAN reported in October of 2022. (The Colorado River in Texas is different from the imperiled river that passes through the U.S. West.)

    Concerned citizens were quick to comment.

    “The Boring Company should NOT be able to dump treated wastewater into the Colorado River in Bastrop, Texas. The community uses that river for recreation, farmers and ranchers use that water to feed us. This should not be allowed,” Bastrop resident Kelly Greene wrote in a comment to TCEQ. 

    While TCEQ’s initial assessment concluded that the discharges would harm water quality, Bastrop Mayor Connie Schroder told KVUE she isn’t sold on the idea.

    “The City of Bastrop, like all municipalities, would prefer wastewater to be treated at state-of-the-art treatment plants and it just so happens the City of Bastrop has one under construction,” Schroder said.

    Dozens of residents voiced worries at a public TCEQ hearing Tuesday night. One resident, Sean Hensley, told HuffPost he wanted TCEQ to reject the permit “unless Elon Musk and his kids are going to come swim in the Colorado River every day.”

    Not everyone at the hearing was against the idea. 

    “Where there’s people, there’s going to be wastewater,” Bastrop County Water Control and Improvement District Treasurer Ron Whipple said, as HuffPost reported. “We can’t stop progress.”

    The company was represented at the hearing by environmental consultant Rajiv Patel, who filed the permit. He said it was a short-term solution because there was no wastewater infrastructure at the company site, so they needed to build their own facility until they could access the public system and place the treatment plant under the control of the local government.

    “The plan we’re going to be talking about today is a step on the road map,” Patel said. 

    However, he also sparked some concern by mentioning for the first time that some of the water would come from a different SpaceX site.

    Several residents mentioned that they were friendly to Musk and business on principle, but wanted to make sure everyone in their community respected the same rules.

    “I think really I’m excited about our community coming together and say[ing] ‘billionaires have to follow the law,’” Ambrose told KVUE ahead of the hearing. 

    Subscribe to get exclusive updates in our daily newsletter!

      By signing up, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy & to receive electronic communications from EcoWatch Media Group, which may include marketing promotions, advertisements and sponsored content.

      Olivia Rosane

      Olivia Rosane is an environmental journalist with a decade’s worth of experience. She has been contributing to EcoWatch since 2018 and has also covered environmental themes for Common Dreams, Atmos, Rewilding, Seattle Met, Treehugger, The Trouble, YES! Magazine and Real Life. She holds a Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Cambridge and a master’s in Art and Politics from Goldsmiths, University of London.
      Facebook icon Twitter icon Pinterest icon Email icon

      Read More

      Solar Project Planned for Mojave Desert Will Destroy Thousands of Joshua Trees and Endangered Tortoise Habitat
      A new solar power project that will break ground in
      By Paige Bennett
      Power Plants to Parklands Is Turning Michigan’s Retired Coal Plants Into Community Hubs of Solace, Wildlife and Solar Energy
      There are currently more than 200 coal-fired power plants in
      By Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
      Value of Carbon Offsets Market Has Dropped 61% Since 2022, Report Finds
      Following multiple scientific studies that have revealed that carbon offsets
      By Paige Bennett

      Subscribe to get exclusive updates in our daily newsletter!

        By signing up, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy & to receive electronic communications from EcoWatch Media Group, which may include marketing promotions, advertisements and sponsored content.

        Latest Articles

        • U.S. Electric Bills Could Increase 8% This Summer Amid Rising Temperatures
          by Paige Bennett
          June 4, 2024
        • Solar Project Planned for Mojave Desert Will Destroy Thousands of Joshua Trees and Endangered Tortoise Habitat
          by Paige Bennett
          June 3, 2024
        • Power Plants to Parklands Is Turning Michigan’s Retired Coal Plants Into Community Hubs of Solace, Wildlife and Solar Energy
          by Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
          May 31, 2024
        • Value of Carbon Offsets Market Has Dropped 61% Since 2022, Report Finds
          by Paige Bennett
          May 31, 2024
        • Highly Intelligent Crows Can Plan How Many Calls to Make, Study Shows
          by Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
          May 30, 2024
        • Increasing Renewable Energy Use in the U.S. Brings Billions in Benefits, Study Finds
          by Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
          May 30, 2024
        • Researchers Develop Protective Nests for At-Risk Turtles in Ontario
          by Paige Bennett
          May 30, 2024
        • Improved Refrigeration Could Reduce Global Food Waste by 41%, Study Finds
          by Cristen Hemingway Jaynes
          May 29, 2024
        EcoWatch

        The best of EcoWatch right in your inbox. Sign up for our email newsletter!

          • Climate Climate
          • Animals Animals
          • Health + Wellness Health + Wellness
          • Insights + Opinion Insights + Opinion
          • Adventure Adventure
          • Oceans Oceans
          • Business Business
          • Solar Solar
          • About EcoWatch
          • Contact EcoWatch
          • EcoWatch Reviews
          • Terms of Use
          • Privacy Policy
          • Learn About Solar Energy
          • Learn About Deregulated Energy
          • EcoWatch UK
          Follow Us
          Facebook 568k
          Twitter 233k
          Instagram 41k
          Subscribe Subscribe

          Experts for a healthier planet and life.

          Mentioned by:
          Learn more
          • Privacy Policy
          • Terms of Use
          • Cookie Preferences
          • Do Not Sell My Information
          © 2024 EcoWatch. All Rights Reserved.