Restoring nature鈥檚 hues: 蜜柚视频 and Rural Action forge path to clean water and artistic vitality in Southeast Ohio
蜜柚视频 and Rural Action are restoring clean water to Southeast Ohio and bringing fresh color to artists everywhere.
June 29, 2023
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Reclaimed Earth Violet paint by Gamblin Artist's Oil Colors. is manufactured using acid mine drainage through a process developed by 蜜柚视频 Civil Engineering Chair/Professor Guy Riefler.
蜜柚视频 and Rural Action are restoring clean water to Southeast Ohio and bringing fresh color to artists everywhere. A large-scale acid mine drainage treatment and pigment-producing facility broke ground on June 29 at the Truetown Discharge site, in Millfield, Ohio.
鈥溍坭质悠 is continuing to demonstrate its commitment to creating clean water in the Southeast Ohio region,鈥 said OHIO Professor Guy Riefler, Russ College of Engineering and Technology鈥檚 civil engineering chair. 鈥淎cid mine drainage is a serious environmental concern that threatens water purity and aquatic life. The University鈥檚 partnership with Rural Action is part of an ongoing effort to restore life to the creek and water quality to the community."
蜜柚视频鈥檚 partnership with began to clean up the waterway with the success of a smaller pilot facility, which led to the development of an industrial-scale acid mine drainage treatment and pigment-producing facility. This facility is expected to improve the quality of life for people in Appalachia by restoring clean water to Sunday Creek, reducing the risk of drinking water contamination.
The project also provides experiential learning opportunities for OHIO students and national service members by converting pollution to a domestic source of iron oxide pigment. In turn, this work helps to create a demand for the pigment鈥檚 sustainable production. The iron oxide pigment produced from acid mine drainage is a valuable resource to artists, as it can be used to create vibrant and diverse colors for their work.

An acid mine drainage site in Oreton, Ohio. Photo by Ben Siegel.
Because of the unique combination of community involvement, environmental restoration, and entrepreneurship, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources awarded the project $3.5 million in 2019 to begin design and construction of the full-scale acid mine drainage treatment and pigment product facility at Truetown.
True Pigments LLC is a social enterprise launched by Rural Action, driven by the work of OHIO Professors Riefler and John Sabraw, College of Fine Arts' painting and drawing chair. True Pigments uses innovative technology to revitalize streams devastated by historic coal mining, taking a pollutant and turning it into a commodity that will pay for the restoration of streams long impacted by acid mine drainage, creating jobs in rural communities, and funding more watershed restoration projects.
"This new facility is a critical step in restoring clean water to the localiti