Wednesday, February 25, 2015
rain event flooding occurs too
Union of Concerned Scientists
February 25 2015 Gretchen Goldman, lead analyst center for Science and Democracy
“Our results were startling,” said Christina Carlson, the UCS report’s first author, “all five refineries analyzed face risks from storm surge and Valero’s Meraux facility may even be inundated by 2050 because of sea level rise alone.
http://blog.ucsusa.org/stormy-seas-rising-risks-new-analysis-shows-undisclosed-climate-change-impacts-at-oil-refineries-639
Here in St Bernard Parish, Louisiana the Valero Meraux refinery had repeated reports of processing campus flooding during afternoon rain showers, which can total up to eight inches and cause overflow flooding from the refinery into our neighborhoods. The last couple of years have been droughts so its not easy to determine if so called improvements to storm water management have actually made a difference. We wont know until the next rain event flood.
Saturday, February 21, 2015
worker safety
United Steelworkers issue strike notices in Louisiana
http://www.theneworleansadvocate.com/news/11660572-123/united-steelworkers-issue-strike-notices
The steelworkers say the sticking point doesn’t involve wages, but rather staffing and workloads, health and safety issues and health care.
“We’re committed to reaching a settlement that works for both parties,” said USW Vice President Tom Conway, “but adequate staffing levels, worker fatigue and other important safety issues must be addressed.”
“Our members are speaking loud and clear,” said Gary Beevers, USW International vice president who oversees the union’s oil sector. “If it takes a global fight to win safe workplaces, so be it.”
by bobby lamb
The steelworkers say the sticking point doesn’t involve wages, but rather staffing and workloads, health and safety issues and health care.
“We’re committed to reaching a settlement that works for both parties,” said USW Vice President Tom Conway, “but adequate staffing levels, worker fatigue and other important safety issues must be addressed.”
“Our members are speaking loud and clear,” said Gary Beevers, USW International vice president who oversees the union’s oil sector. “If it takes a global fight to win safe workplaces, so be it.”
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
alarms and siren
Valero Energy's Meraux petroleum refinery signaled alarms for plant workers due to an unexpected fire in the R O S E unit, which was reported extinguished within ten minutes.
Residents were the first to notify local fire and sheriff departments of the reported worker evacuation of Area 2 of the refinery. If the plant alarms automatically signaled the local authorities, that would bring about much needed improvements for community safety.
Residents were the first to notify local fire and sheriff departments of the reported worker evacuation of Area 2 of the refinery. If the plant alarms automatically signaled the local authorities, that would bring about much needed improvements for community safety.
Friday, December 12, 2014
public participation
Public Participation
http://www.cleanwatershedcampaign.org/public-participation/
The EPA organized a community group to evaluate the success of remediation [by Dow Chemical]. It met a few times, provided critical commentary, and was dropped as Dow completed its EPA required action. Over the years, this would be a familiar model of public participation. If the panel was critical, its life was usually brief. Citizen oversight of one of Michigan’s most powerful Fortune 500 companies would not be popular with regulatory authorities, elected officials or more importantly, the Dow Chemical Company...... Dow itself had (has) a community advisory panel. Its goal was (is) to get honest feedback from the community as to how it was performing as a corporate citizen. Mary Sinclair, Midland citizen, science and communication adviser to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, didn’t last a year on the panel. She recognized that the company was not forthcoming in information requests or responsive to suggestions – she left.
Is this yet another exercise in futility or is it the finality so many of us
hope has arrived?
Do we participate in good faith? Eight years of Dow’s tactics of denial and delay, eight years of frustration at the state’s impotence. Can the federal government succeed? Can the CAG succeed?
Each individual active in this clean up will have to answer these questions for themselves. I for one am not prepared to let any opportunity to hold Dow and the EPA accountable slip away.
Terry Miller, Chairman Lone Tree Council
Saturday, November 15, 2014
no off site impacts, no reportable quantities
no off-site impacts at the plant and no emission
permit exceedances
February 2013 releases at Valero cause sulfur dioxide levels
to spike (readings of 103, 109, 128, 138 and 180 ppb) http://www.nola.com/environment/index.ssf/2013/02/st_bernard_parish_sulphur_diox.html
October 2013 crude oil spews onto St Bernard Highway
(workers evacuated into neighborhood, no offsite impacts) http://www.nola.com/traffic/index.ssf/2013/10/valero_accident_sprays_crude.html
March 22 2014 ROSE unit startup (no reportable quantities,
no violations of permits) http://www.nola.com/environment/index.ssf/2014/03/valero_energy_corps_meraux_ref.html
April 21 2014 Benzene saturation unit explosion (the issue
is the emissions are aromatic; it’s only a detonation) http://www.nola.com/environment/index.ssf/2014/04/valero_energy_corps_meraux_ref_1.html
November 2014 MDH unit startup and blown hole in the south
flare (Valero noticed a tear in the flare and this will decrease combustion
efficiency; MDH unit makes kerosene and diesel) http://www.nola.com/environment/index.ssf/2014/11/valero_energy_corps_meraux_ref_2.html
November 2014 startup of new hydrocracker vessel …………………………………………………………..
Thursday, November 6, 2014
what happens without sidewalks
school students in Louisiana are forced to walk in the street because not all neighborhoods are afforded sidewalks
tragically students in Orleans Parish and more recently in Breaux Bridge have been killed while walking in the street to the bus stop. Residents of Breaux Bridge hope the incident lease to changes, like sidewalks
tragically students in Orleans Parish and more recently in Breaux Bridge have been killed while walking in the street to the bus stop. Residents of Breaux Bridge hope the incident lease to changes, like sidewalks
http://www.wfla.com/story/27180821/breaux-bridge-address-street-safety
"It's the time to come together as one for the greater good of all of the families that have suffered in this endeavor."" Councilman Menard also told us that although state law doesn't require sidewalks. Since he's been in office he has mandated that every new sub division or development have sidewalks.
In St Bernard Parish, instead of maintaining the newly installed FEMA project sidewalks, parish officials have allowed removal of sidewalks, even claiming an agreement allows sidewalk removal as long as the sidewalk is not currently used as a bus stop. Officials would not answer why students must now walk in the street to get to the bus stop nor have they responded to a public records request for a copy of the agreement to remove sidewalks.
One property owner that has been allowed to remove sidewalks is Valero Energy, a profitable corporation that recently announced third-quarter 2014 earnings of $1.1 billion.
Certainly they can afford to be a good neighbor and replace sidewalks and improve pedestrian safety!
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
benzene monitoring proposal is flawed
Public Comment to U S EPA on the proposed "Refinery Rules"
more information on submitting public comments here
Dear Gina McCarthy,
Global Community Monitor is writing in support of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's efforts to strengthen refinery air toxics emission limits and monitoring requirements to protect public health. The EPA must reduce emissions of toxic chemicals from refineries based on the best scientific understanding of the harm this hazardous pollution can cause, especially for children, women of child bearing age and the elderly.
Let me say first we support the bulk of the new rule, except for the flawed so called "fenceline monitoring" section that fails to take into account many important facts as well as the latest technologies which deliver data that actually could inform corrective action by a refinery.
Today I'd like to focus on a huge basic flaw in your staff proposal to use "benzene badges" to absorb two weeks of air at a time to obtain an average of benzene exposures.
As I am sure you are well aware, the largest US refineries are located in clusters in port areas of Texas and Louisiana. In most cases, and there some insignificant exceptions, the refineries are located directly adjacent to one another and share a common fenceline on at least one boundary if not several.
The refinery used for the journal article written to prop up this flawed proposal, was curiously the Koch Brothers West Refinery in Corpus Christi, TX. It is the only refinery in Corpus that does not share a fenceline with its neighbor refineries. Please have your staff justify this choice and rationale to not also study the vast majority of cases where refineries are adjacent.
Obviously, with undeniable variability of wind direction and changes over a two week period, no data of any value would inform corrective action because you can never know which of all the fugitive sources in a refinery contributed to the exceedence of of the risk based threshold. If you add in additional large sources of one or more refinery, there is little that can be said if anything about which refinery could be asked to "correct" the excess. As you know, refineries are skilled at blaming the other guy.
Another reason, there is no value in 2 week averages of benzene in many refinery areas like Corpus, Houston, Lake Charles, Port Arthur, Wilmington and throughout the region is that the refineries are located adjacent to at least one major freeway. This means these refineries could just blame the freeway and object to the plan to correct!
Thanks for listening, Gina!
Best,
Denny
Denny Larson
Executive Director
Global Community Monitor (GCM)
www.gcmonitor.org
Poverty is not an accident. Like slavery and apartheid, it is man-made and can be removed by the actions of human beings.
Nelson Mandela
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)