Texas freeze led to release of tons of air pollutants as refineries shut
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[February 22, 2021]
By Laura Sanicola and Erwin Seba
NEW YORK/HOUSTON (Reuters) - The largest
U.S. oil refiners released tons of air pollutants into the skies over
Texas this past week, according to figures provided to the state, as
refineries and petrochemical plants in the region scrambled to shut
production during frigid weather.
An arctic air mass that spread into an area unused to such low
temperatures killed at least two dozen people in Texas and knocked out
power to more than 4 million at its peak. It also hit natural gas and
electric generation, cutting supplies needed to run the plants along the
U.S. Gulf Coast.
Shutdowns led to the refineries flaring, or burning and releasing gases,
to prevent damage to their processing units. That flaring darkened the
skies in eastern Texas with smoke visible for miles.
"These emissions can dwarf the usual emissions of the refineries by
orders of magnitude," said Jane Williams, chair of the Sierra Club's
National Clean Air Team.
She said U.S. regulators must change policies that allow "these massive
emissions to occur with impunity."
The five largest refiners emitted nearly 337,000 pounds of pollutants,
including benzene, carbon monoxide, hydrogen sulfide and sulfur dioxide,
according to preliminary data supplied to the Texas Commission on
Environment Quality (TCEQ).
Valero Energy Corp said in a filing with the TCEQ that it released
78,000 pounds over 24 hours beginning last Monday from its Port Arthur,
Texas, refinery, citing the frigid cold and interruptions in utility
services.
The 118,100 pounds of emissions from Motiva's Port Arthur refinery from
Monday to Thursday were more than three times the excess emissions that
it declared to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for the whole of
2019.
Marathon Petroleum Corp's <MPC.N> Galveston Bay Refinery released 14,255
pounds over less than five hours on Monday, equivalent to about 10% of
its total releases above permitted levels in 2019.
Exxon Mobil Corp said its Baytown Olefins Plant emitted nearly a ton of
benzene and 68,000 tons of carbon monoxide, citing in its disclosure the
halting of "multiple process units and safe utilization of the flare
system."
Exxon blamed the shutdown of two Texas refineries on the freezing
weather and loss of natural gas supplies. A spokesman said its
petrochemical plants in Texas and Louisiana had supplied 560 megawatts
to local communities, helping power about 300,000 homes.
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A police officer drives past a refinery in the industrial east end
in Pasadena, Texas, U.S., September 18, 2018. REUTERS/Loren
Elliott/File Photo
Valero did not have an immediate comment. Motiva did not respond to
a request for comment.
"We don’t typically provide comment on our operations beyond our
filings," said Marathon spokesman Jamal Kheiry. "However, I can say
that the safety of our workers, our neighbors, and the environment
are our top priorities as we operate our facilities."
Final figures on pollution releases are due to be submitted to the
state in two weeks.
'NO SAFE AMOUNT'
The flaring continued through the week as refiners kept plants out
of service.
"We had six or seven flares going at one time," Hilton Kelly, who
lives in Port Arthur, home to refineries operated by Motiva, Valero
and Total SE , said on Friday. "It's still happening now."
Sharon Wilson, a researcher at advocacy group Earthworks, said the
releases were alarming, in part because "there is no safe amount of
benzene for human exposure."
State data showing oil and gas producers were flaring methane this
past week "is just making things worse, and it could have been
prevented" by winterizing facilities, she said.
Texas oil and gas companies filed 174 notices of pollution releases
above permitted levels between Feb. 11 and Feb. 18, four times the
number the prior week, according to TCEQ data.
Total pollution at Houston-area facilities during the cold snap
totaled about 703,000 pounds, about 3% of the total pollution over
permitted amounts for all of 2019 and almost 10% of 2018's releases,
according to TCEQ data analyzed by advocacy group Environment Texas.
(Reporting by Laura Sanicola in New York and Erwin Seba in Houston;
Editing by Gary McWilliams, Daniel Wallis and Peter Cooney)
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