Texas repeatedly raises pollution limits for Cheniere LNG plant
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[June 24, 2022]
By Nichola Groom and Valerie Volcovici
PORTLAND, Texas (Reuters) - Cheniere, the
largest U.S. exporter of liquefied natural gas, boasts that it’s helping
to “improve local air quality in communities globally” because the
cleaner burning fuel it ships displaces coal in power plants.
But in the Corpus Christi, Texas region, where the fuel is prepared for
shipment, the company is making air quality worse -with the consent of
state regulators.
Cheniere’s massive LNG plant, on the outskirts of the Gulf Coast city,
has exceeded its permitted limits for emissions of pollutants such as
soot, carbon monoxide and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) hundreds of
times since it started up in 2018, according to a Reuters review of
regulatory documents.
Instead of levying penalties for such violations, the Texas Commission
on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) has responded by granting Cheniere big
increases in the plant’s pollution limits, the documents show. The
facility is now allowed to chuff out some 353 tons per year of VOCs,
double the limit set out in its original permit eight years ago. The
state raised limits on four other pollutants by more than more than 40%.
The issue has infuriated nearby residents who cite the frequency of
large flares, used to burn off excess gas to relieve pressure, and
evidence that local air quality has deteriorated significantly since the
facility’s start-up. They have petitioned the state to crack down on the
plant’s pollution rather than allowing it to emit more.
Texas regulators have acknowledged the plant's impact on the local air
quality: In its annual enforcement report for fiscal year 2019, the
agency blamed the Corpus Christi region’s 83% increase in emissions from
the prior year in part on the startup of the Cheniere facility.
Cheniere said in a statement to Reuters that it had initially
underestimated emissions from the plant because it was required to apply
for the original permit before its engineering work was completed. The
company said its design and equipment adhere to federal standards
requiring the "best available control technology" to limit pollution.
When actual emissions exceeded those estimates, Cheniere sought
amendments from regulators to "reconcile" the higher pollution with its
early assumptions, the company said.
The plant could not run consistently and efficiently under the lower
pollution limits, which would require frequent shutdowns, plant general
manager Ari Aziz said in an interview.
The emissions from Cheniere’s Corpus Christi LNG facility highlights a
broader danger of surging air pollution as the United States and other
nations seek to expand U.S. gas exports. LNG facilities are substantial
polluters, and regulation will be key to ensuring their emissions don’t
pose big health problems for residents near the plants.
The administration of U.S. President Joe Biden views expanding the LNG
industry as a key tool for helping Europe reduce its energy dependence
on Russia, which has been aggressively sanctioned by Western nations
since invading Ukraine in February. The LNG expansion policy, however,
could undermine the administration’s promises to combat climate change
and provide cleaner air to communities living near industrial sites.
Biden's Energy Department said in a statement to Reuters that expanding
LNG to address global energy shortages "must be balanced" with the
fossil fuel's environmental impacts. The administration said it supports
research into technologies that will mitigate such impacts "in a just
and sustainable way," without specifying any particular technology.
U.S. LNG export capacity is on track to soar by 40% in the next two
years, according to the Department of Energy, with companies including
Cheniere, Freeport LNG, and Sempra LNG eyeing new projects and big
expansions.
“They tell us we need to export more, we need to help our friends in
Europe. But what about us?” said Elida Castillo, director of Chispa
Texas, an organization representing the low-income, mostly Hispanic
communities of Gregory and Taft, near the terminal. “We're the ones who
are left to suffer with all the pollution.”
VIOLATIONS, BUT NO PENALTIES
In July of last year, the TCEQ opened an enforcement probe into the
Corpus Christi facility following 293 instances in 2020 when plant
emissions exceeded permitted limits. The excess pollution resulted in 19
violations that the agency investigated for potential enforcement. All
were resolved without penalties on the company.
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A general view of the Cheniere Texas LNG facility in Portland,
Texas, U.S., June 13, 2022. To match Insight USA-LNG/AIRQUALITY
REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare
The probe found, for instance, that the facility's
condensate tank, where compounds removed from natural gas are
stored, emitted more than two and a half times its allowable level
of VOCs for a period of 13 months. The chemicals, which can include
compounds like benzene, ethylene, toluene and formaldehyde, are
removed from natural gas during the liquefaction process and can
cause a range of health effects from eye irritation to cancer.
According to state records, the violation began in October 2019 and
ended in November of 2020 when TCEQ officials granted Cheniere's
request to be able to emit more pollution. That permit amendment
also resolved two other violations, for exceeding, on several
occasions, the hourly limits of VOCs and carbon monoxide emitted
from gas flares, an enforcement document showed.
A TCEQ spokesperson said changing the plant’s permitted pollution
limits was "an acceptable resolution" because Cheniere could
demonstrate that those increases in emissions have not put the
Corpus Christi area’s air quality in violation of federal standards.
The U.S. Clean Air Act’s National Ambient Air Quality Standards
impose limits on the amount of pollution in a given area and
restrict further industrial development only when pollution levels
exceed those limits.
The amendment stands out as an extraordinary accommodation of an
industrial polluter at the expense of air quality for local
residents, said Wilma Subra, a Louisiana-based environmental
scientist and president of the environmental consulting firm Subra
Company, who reviewed the Reuters reporting. Subra said Texas
regulators are essentially telling Cheniere: If you can’t meet
clean0air standards, “we would be glad to help.”
The TCEQ has granted the Cheniere plant two additional amendments
that raised pollution limits and is considering a third.
The Cheniere plant is regulated as a major pollution source under
federal law because it emits more than 250 tons of pollution. The
designation requires the plant to demonstrate that it uses
state-of-the-art pollution controls, but specific limits are left up
to state regulators.
Kelly Haragan, an environmental law professor at the University of
Texas law school, said that the pattern of adjusting emissions
limits higher to resolve pollution violations at Cheniere raised
questions about whether the facility was indeed using the most
reliable emissions control technology.
Cheniere said it was complying with the regulation.
Residents near the Cheniere plant worry about the health effects of
the area’s expanding industrial sector.
“They shouldn't be granted permits that just allow the emissions to
keep going up,” said Jennifer Hillard, an architect whose home in
the waterfront town of Ingleside on the Bay faces the LNG tankers
coming in and out of the Cheniere plant. “What is the impact of
these types of deviations? … Does anyone know? Is anyone watching?”
Encarnacion Serna, a retired chemical engineer whose home in
Portland’s East Cliff neighborhood is less than 3,000 feet from the
Cheniere terminal, said a massive flaring event there last month
created “unbearable heat and glare” that forced him to send his
visiting grandkids to another relative’s house further away.
Serna, 70, has already filed three complaints with concerned
neighbors against Cheniere this year in response to large flaring
events. “We are defending our communities from being obliterated,”
he said.
Serna and other residents of Portland, Gregory and Ingleside will
challenge the latest Cheniere air permit application at a contested
case hearing on June 30.
Cheniere is currently seeking even higher limits on its carbon
monoxide and VOC emissions at the Corpus Christi facility, according
to regulatory documents, citing the presence of more impurities in
its natural gas stream than it initially expected.
Longer-term, Cheniere has launched a major expansion of the plant.
The TCEQ has already approved the necessary air permits.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom and Valerie Volcovici; editing by
Richard Valdmanis and Brian Thevenot)
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