Harmful soot unchecked as Big Oil battles EPA over testing
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[January 06, 2022] By
Tim McLaughlin
(Reuters) - A deadly form of soot pollution
from U.S. refineries has gone unregulated for decades because of a
dispute between the U.S. oil industry and federal environmental
officials over how to measure it, according to documents from the
Environmental Protection Agency reviewed by Reuters.
The delay in addressing so-called condensable fine particulate matter
emissions means this pollutant is being released by scores of facilities
across the country unchecked, adding to a slew of other contaminants
from oil refineries that researchers say take a disproportionately large
toll on the health of poor and minority communities living nearby.
The absence of a federal standard has led at least one regional air
quality regulator in California to attempt a crack-down on these
emissions, an effort that has sparked litigation from oil refiners
located there.
Condensable fine particulate matter is a form of soot that leaves the
smokestack as a gas before solidifying into particles when it cools. The
EPA first proposed a method to measure it in 1991 amid evidence that it
was at least as damaging to human lungs as normal soot, which is solid
when emitted.
The agency says even short-term exposure to fine soot particles can lead
to heart attacks, lung cancer, asthma attacks and premature death.
Scientific research cited by the EPA estimates that, combined,
condensable and solid soot cause more than 50,000 premature deaths a
year in the United States, findings that are disputed by the industry.
But the EPA has declined to impose limits on the condensable form of the
pollutant. The oil industry and its main lobbying group, the American
Petroleum Institute (API), claim the agency has failed to come up with
an accurate test to quantify it, according to EPA disclosures and
interviews with independent testing firms, API officials and the trade
group’s members.
The industry says testing employed currently can overstate the amount of
condensable soot emitted by refineries under certain conditions, a flaw
the EPA has acknowledged.
“Costly retrofits or new control devices should not be required based on
results from a faulty method," major U.S. oil company Chevron Corp told
Reuters in a statement.
Setting a national limit on pollutant emissions without consensus on how
to measure those emissions is unfeasible because it would invite legal
challenges from the industry, according to regulators and stack-testing
analysts.
The EPA said in a statement that it is still conducting research into
how to reliably measure condensable soot, but did not comment on a
timeline for finishing the effort.
The delays are dangerous, said Greg Karras, an environmental scientist
who has worked for nonprofit groups seeking reduced emissions from the
refining industry.
"It is inappropriate to wait more than 30 years to protect people from
this form of pollution while you are trying to perfect a test,” Karras
said.
If condensable soot were eventually regulated, it would force nearly all
of the country’s 135 oil refineries to invest in new pollution-control
equipment, based on estimates of current emissions using the EPA’s
contested testing method.
SAN FRANCISCO CRACKS DOWN
Soot is comprised of particles many times smaller than a grain of sand
that can penetrate the lungs and bloodstream if inhaled. The EPA
regulates solid forms of soot, which are easy to measure by filtering
smokestack emissions. But because condensable soot is gaseous in the
smokestack, it is harder to quantify.
The EPA’s current test for condensable soot, called Method 202, uses
probes and glass tubes placed inside refinery smokestacks to collect
samples from the gas stream. It shows individual U.S. refineries can
emit up to hundreds of tons of the pollutant per year, sometimes
accounting for nearly half of a refinery’s total soot emissions,
according to a Reuters review of regulatory documents filed by oil
companies.
The material examined by the news agency dates from 2017 to 2021 and
includes results of Method 202 tests that some refineries had
commissioned to meet local requirements or as part of litigation.
The API, however, says the test can produce erroneously high readings of
condensable soot if the samples react with other chemicals that commonly
are present at a refinery.
The EPA has acknowledged that pollution levels could be overestimated
using Method 202, agency disclosures show. The EPA revised Method 202 in
2010 in an attempt to eliminate this bias. But the revision did not
fully address industry concerns about potentially skewed results due to
the presence of other compounds in refinery smokestacks, particularly
ammonia, according to a 2014 EPA memorandum viewed by Reuters.
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A view of the ExxonMobil Baton Rouge Refinery in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, U.S., May 15, 2021. REUTERS/Kathleen Flynn
The EPA’s National Risk Management Research Laboratory in Ohio, which is charged
with finding scientific and engineering solutions to environmental problems, is
now working with the API on resolving issues with Method 202 while exploring an
alternative methodology, the EPA told Reuters.
The long-running issue surfaced last year when regulators in San Francisco’s Bay
Area, which includes nine counties around the city of San Francisco, passed the
strictest soot regulations in the country in a bid to ease pollution in the
neighborhoods around its cluster of oil refineries.
U.S. states and regions are often given the power to impose their own pollution
limits provided those rules are as strong, or stronger, than federal
regulations.
The Bay Area Air Quality Management District’s (BAAQMD) new limits include
condensable soot and require the industry – despite its objections - to use
Method 202 to quantify those soot emissions. The agency contends the test is
accurate and that condensable soot measurements are not impacted by the presence
of ammonia in a smokestack if a refinery is operating properly. The tougher soot
standard goes into effect in 2026 to give oil companies time to adapt.
Refining companies Chevron and PBF Energy Inc are fighting the BAAQMD’s new
regulations in Contra Costa County Superior Court, according to a civil
complaint filed in September. The companies say the rules would force them to
spend hundreds of millions of dollars on pollution-control equipment for their
Bay Area refineries.
“API and our members support policies at the federal level that follow the
science to drive emissions reductions, but the Bay Area Air Quality Management
District is using the wrong approach,” Ron Chittim, API’s vice president of
downstream policy, said in a statement to Reuters.
Chevron estimates it would cost $1.48 billion to install a so-called wet gas
scrubber at its refinery in Richmond, California, a pollution-control approach
the BAAQMD wants the company to use.
BAAQMD estimates its restrictions would cut the area’s annual death toll from
soot by as much as half. Soot-related deaths currently average up to 12 a year
from Chevron's Richmond refinery and up to six deaths a year from PBF Energy’s
refinery in Martinez, California, the regulator estimates.
Refiners disputed those figures in comments submitted to BAAQMD staff. The
industry says the numbers don't take into account lifestyle choices of the
deceased, such as smoking, and it contends the health benefits from cuts in soot
production are exaggerated.
A BAAQMD spokesperson declined further comment, citing ongoing litigation.
NEW STANDARD?
It remains to be seen whether other California air quality districts, regulators
in other states or the federal government will follow the Bay Area’s lead.
The EPA under Democratic President Joe Biden has said it is weighing whether to
lower its existing limits for soot pollution after former Republican President
Donald Trump’s administration declined to do so. But the agency would not
specify whether it planned to crack down on condensable soot.
In Texas, which has the largest number of refineries in the country, the Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality said it does not have plans to tighten
restrictions on particulate matter, a spokesman said.
Elsewhere, recent test results at two refineries viewed by Reuters showed that
condensable soot accounted for a significant portion of overall soot generated
by those operations.
In Delaware, at the Delaware City Refinery owned by PBF, 48% of the soot
measured was condensable soot, according to results from a May stack test
performed by an outside consulting firm as part of the facility's routine
compliance with federal air quality regulations.
PBF declined to comment.
At Exxon Mobil Corp's refinery in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 17% of soot measured
was condensable, according to an August stack test on file with the Louisiana
Department of Environmental Quality.
Exxon declined to comment on the battle over Method 202. The company said it was
"continuously optimizing our processes to minimize emissions and enhance energy
efficiency.”
(Reporting by Tim McLaughlin in Boston; editing by Richard Valdmanis and Marla
Dickerson)
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