Up to 82,000 tons of coal ash and 27 million gallons of polluted water have poured into North Carolina’s Dan River after a pipe burst beneath a coal ash pond owned by Duke Energy.

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“The Dan River is very gray and ashy looking, incredibly dark,” Amy Adams of Appalachian Voices told Common Dreams as she stood at the river. “It looks like if you had mixed your run-of-the-mill campfire ash in a five-gallon bucket of water.”

According to the utility company, the incident occurred Sunday afternoon at the now-shuttered Dan River Steam Station in Eden, which was retired in 2012 and is now a dumping ground for ash left behind by burned coal. The company waited until Monday to announce the disaster to the public, infuriating local residents and environmental organizations.

Duke spokeswoman Catherine Butler says the utility can provide no concrete numbers on the magnitude of the spill and claimed that the leak has been stopped for now yet has not been permanently repaired, according to the Charlotte Business Journal.

Yet Adams told Common Dreams that the spill is still ongoing.

Residents and environmental groups are demanding that Duke Energy and the North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources immediately and publicly disclose the full extent of the disaster.

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