Thursday, March 28, 2013
NO TRUCK ROUTE
Posted No Truck Route Signs Disregarded
Large trucks do not belong in neighborhoods and local business owners should be held accountable.
Large trucks do not belong in neighborhoods and local business owners should be held accountable.
Sunday, March 24, 2013
barge gate
“It’s the thing that keeps me up at night the most … I keep seeing us trying to close that hole in the wall with a storm coming — and having nothing but problems.” — Bob Turner, regional director, South Louisiana Flood Protection Authority
http://thelensnola.org/2013/03/21/local-officials-losing-sleep-over-weak-link-in-our-post-katrina-flood-defense/
By Bob Marshall Staff writer The Lens
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Moderate AIQ for SO2
The DEQ has posted a "Moderate" sulfur dioxide Air Quality Index at 724pm on March 23 2013 based on the last posted sulfur dioxide reading at 4pm
Friday, March 15, 2013
sulfur dioxide presentation
SBPG HRQLC information meeting on sulfur dioxide around the 18 minute mark
http://sbpg.pegcentral.com/player.php?video=f976f5438f5457543ce98b53e18b5324
The Parish Council also requested a presentation at its March 19 2013 meeting around the 1:57 minute mark
http://sbpg.pegcentral.com/player.php?video=aca2cc5f8d9b6c8bd8f37edccdc43776
New AQI Index link on LA DEQ website http://so2.deq.louisiana.gov/
Community Alert system reported to be under development
LA DEQ air monitor sites, select Site Data, select "Ch_Vista" or "Meraux"
SITE DATA LINK AT LA DEQ
Valero Energy air monitor site, select readings http://lena.providenceeng.com/
http://sbpg.pegcentral.com/player.php?video=f976f5438f5457543ce98b53e18b5324
The Parish Council also requested a presentation at its March 19 2013 meeting around the 1:57 minute mark
http://sbpg.pegcentral.com/player.php?video=aca2cc5f8d9b6c8bd8f37edccdc43776
New AQI Index link on LA DEQ website http://so2.deq.louisiana.gov/
Community Alert system reported to be under development
LA DEQ air monitor sites, select Site Data, select "Ch_Vista" or "Meraux"
SITE DATA LINK AT LA DEQ
Valero Energy air monitor site, select readings http://lena.providenceeng.com/
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Comments to EPA
LDEQ has recommended St Bernard non-attainment for sulfur dioxide levels and EPA has proposed St Bernard be designated non-attainment. The deadline for Public Comments on the proposed rule is March 18 2013. All correspondence should reference Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2012–0233 Comments may be submitted:
online http://www.regulations.gov/#!submitComment;D=EPA-HQ-OAR-2012-0233-0135
email a-and-r-docket@epa.gov
fax 202.566.9744.
mail Air Docket, Attention Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2012–0233, Environmental Protection Agency, Mail Code: 6102T, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460.
This document contains a brief history of the EPA SO2 NAAQS
http://www.lung.org/get-involved/advocate/advocacy-documents/final-comments-sulfur-dioxide.pdf
American Lung Association 2008 Comments on Sulfur Dioxide NAAQS
We believe it is the responsibility of the polluters to clean up their emissions so that the air is safe for everyone to breathe, including people with chronic respiratory diseases such as asthma and COPD.
We believe that pollution control is the first line of defense and that everyone should be able to safely breathe the outdoor air, without resorting to medication. We know that the most vulnerable members of society are most likely to live near air pollution sources and are least able to bear the harm that pollution causes.
Monday, February 11, 2013
flaring causes sulfur health violations
Flaring event from an upset at Valero Energy's Meraux refinery, yesterday. Sulfur dioxide concentrations violated health standards, as measured in the neighborhood at Valero's Ventura Drive ambient air monitor. St Bernard Parish is already non-attainment for sulfur dioxide; the air quality in St Bernard Parish fails to meet the sulfur health standards, based on an air monitor in Chalmette Vista. The increasing sulfur dioxide concentrations measured at the Ventura Drive monitor may further demonstrate the sulfur health issue throughout the community.
submitted by a concerned resident
clouds of pollution releases in yesterday's flaring event
residents reported intolerable odors throughout the neighborhood
the sulfur dioxide had entered homes
Failure to meet health standards for sulfur dioxide occurs when SO2 hourly average concentrations fail to remain below 75 parts per billion. Areas are considered non-attainment when the 3 year average of the annual 99th percentiles fail to remain below 75 ppb. St Bernard Parish's current 3 year average is 255 ppb (based on the Chalmette Vista monitor). At the Ventura Drive monitor, the highest reading in 2012 was 120 ppb. The second highest reading at Ventura Drive in 2012 was 48 ppb, and to date in 2013 the second highest reading is 138 ppb. It's entirely possible that IF the Valero Ventura Drive monitor measures SO2 concentrations at or above 40 ppb in 2014, the 3 year average based on that monitor could fail to be below 75 ppb.
The sulfur dioxide pollution problem is throughout the community and we all need to do our part to be part of the solution; our lives and our future depend on it.
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Sunday, February 3, 2013
Ozone in St Bernard Parish, Louisiana
St Bernard Parish Air Quality
UNLESS ................................................
“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot,
Nothing is going to get better. It's not.”
― Dr. Seuss, The Lorax
Nothing is going to get better. It's not.”
― Dr. Seuss, The Lorax
Ozone is formed when nitrates of oxygen (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) combine together in sunlight. One solution to high concentrations of ground level ozone is the use of fuel that contains less benzene and lower sulfur content. Some communities switch public transportation buses and school buses to bio diesel or natural gas or use ultra low sulfur content fuels in an attempt to reduce Ozone pollution.
Ozone Attainment Status
The Good News on Ozone levels in St Bernard is there seems to be enough lead time to address the Ozone issue before being designated or labeled non-attainment for Ozone. It's a violation of the Ozone standard when the 8-hour average of ground level ozone does not remain below the current standard of 75 parts per billion. (The old standard was an 8-hour average of 80 parts per billion). An area would be recommended for designation (or "labeled") non-attainment when the annual fourth-highest daily maximum 8-hour concentration of Ozone, averaged over 3 years, is 75 ppb or higher. http://www.epa.gov/air/criteria.html In St Bernard Parish, Ozone levels are sampled at the LDEQ "Meraux" site at Joe Davies Elementary School.
According to data on EPA's Air Data website, St Bernard Parish's current 3 year average for Ozone is around 73 ppb and we all need to do our part to keep it below 75 ppb. (Based on annual fourth highest daily maximum 8 hour concentration of Ozone for 2010 at 74 ppb , for 2011 at 76 ppb , for 2012 at 69ppb. { [(74+76+69) / 3 ] = 73 ppb} From http://www.epa.gov/airdata/ left hand column menu, select Monitor Values, select Ozone, select Louisiana, select year, scroll down to 8-hour averages.) LDEQ's "Meraux" site readings assessible here , under site data, select "Meraux".
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So, now is the time for all of us to do our part to be part of the solution, to work with coalitions to reduce Ozone, and to protect what little is left of our good air quality. Part of success stories, like St Bernard's in the late 1990's and Baton Rouge's recent success to reduce Ozone, are coalitions that take "Early Action" to reduce pollution before its so bad. For Ozone, this would include even further reduction of NOx (nitrates of oxygen) and VOCs (volatile organic compounds such as benzene, ethylbenzene, toluene, xylene and others) at all nearby industries, and the use of "Clean Fuels" in buses, trucks and other vehicles, including barge and ship traffic on the Mississippi River.
Clean Fuels create dirty neighborhoods
Clean Fuels create dirty neighborhoods
But Ozone and Clean Fuel Projects are sort of a Catch 22 in communities where the Clean Fuel is manufactured. When EPA mandates lower benzene and sulfur content in Clean Fuels, the refining of crude oil into "Clean Fuels" results in more sulfur dioxide and VOCs, such as benzene, in the fenceline neighborhoods, unless the LDEQ requires more stringent pollution controls. It seems Clean Fuels Projects that began around the late 1990's, or early 2000, were "grandfathered in" and LDEQ didnot require the state-of-the-art pollution controls. The result: St Bernard Parish is now the poster child for sulfur dioxide pollution, with concentration levels three times higher than the one-hour sulfur health limit, the 2nd highest sulfur dioxide concentrations in the United States, second only to Hawaiin communities that seem to be around active volcanoes. The EPA is expected to make its official designation of St Bernard Parish as non-attainment for sulfur dioxide health standards.
Calcined petroleum coke (CPC) also contributes sulfur emissions. Louisiana is the largest CPC producing region in the world outside of China, with several Rain CII coke plants accounting for more than half of Louisiana’s CPC production. Rain CII's facility in Chalmette operates under a variance and has received several additional exemptions to bypass the pyroscrubber and vent emissions for upto 500 hours a year. Rain CII Chalmette recently applied for a "minor" modification to its Title V air permit to make the variance permanent and to increase the total of bypass or vent time to 836 hours. This "minor" application is separate from its December 2012 short-term variance for 336 hours that LDEQ pulled in January 2013 admist concerns of high sulfur levels in the adjacent neighborhood. As a "minor" modification, the Title V air permit is subject to less stringent pollution controls than "major" modifications. Minor modifications do not require pubic notice or a cost benefit analysis. St Bernard Parish Government has requested LDEQ conduct a public hearing on the "minor" modification at Rain CII. This will be a good opportunity for concerned people and government bodies, such as the HRQL, to submit pubic comment.
Labels:
air quality,
Clean Fuels,
LA,
LDEQ,
Meraux,
ozone,
St Bernard Parish,
Tier 3 Mandate
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