From Black Plume to Benzene Fumes, Houston's Plight Drags On
(Bloomberg) -- Now that the four-day fire is out at a Houston-area chemical storage complex, the real danger has emerged.
Cancer-causing benzene wafted across suburbs of the fourth-largest
U.S. city Thursday, shutting roads, schools and industrial plants, and
disrupting normal life for half a day. A major oil refinery in the heart
of North America’s most important fuel-producing region told workers to
stay home and the Texas National Guard deployed troops to assist with
air monitoring. The benzene probably arose from charred chemical tanks
as overnight winds stirred remnants of their contents, owner
Intercontinental Terminals Co. said.
Even after the working-class suburb of Deer Park rescinded an order
telling everyone to shut their windows and stay inside around lunchtime,
the reprieve may be temporary, scientists warned. Warm temperatures
that are swirling the air and dispersing toxic fumes will disappear
after sunset, potentially allowing benzene to settle at ground level,
said Jeff Evans, the meteorologist in charge of the National Weather
Service’s Houston office.
“The air is mixing vertically now but what you need to watch for is tonight” when those conditions cease, Evans said.
The U.S. Chemical Safety Board announced late Thursday it will be investigating the blaze.
Toxic fumes detected hours before dawn panicked Houstonians normally
accustomed to orange, fiery flares from the warren of refinery and
chemical plant smokestacks that stretches to the eastern horizon. Even
when the chemical fire erupted Sunday and sent a black anvil of smoke a
mile above the city, many residents were nonchalant.
No Longer Alight
But with the fire at Intercontinental’s storage complex extinguished,
the situation is actually more treacherous because the pools of naphtha
and other crude-oil byproducts at the site are no longer burning off --
and are free to evaporate at ground level.
“It’s making the dangers worse for the communities near the site,”
said Daniel Cohan, associate professor of civil and environmental
engineering at Rice University. “The fires that had been burning had
been burning off many of these air toxins and wafting them into a plume
higher into the sky, where it was able to spread and disperse into
broader regions.”
Police began dismantling barricades erected before sunrise in Deer
Park, 18 miles (29 kilometers) east of downtown Houston when the
shelter-in-place order was issued. Fire crews continued to douse several
destroyed storage tanks with water and foam at Intercontinental’s
facility to cool the smoldering remnants.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc told workers at its nearby 275,000-barrel-a-day
Deer Park refinery to stay at home or remain inside if they’d already
arrived at work. The refinery’s operations are normal, said Ray Fisher, a
Shell spokesman.
“This is a real risk to human health, not theoretical,” said Elena
Craft, senior director for climate and health at the Environmental
Defense Fund. “Benzene is a known carcinogen, and no amount is safe to
breathe. We urge everyone, especially pregnant women, to be vigilant.”
The benzene release was likely caused by a shifting of foam in one of
the tanks, ITC spokeswoman Alice Richardson said at a press conference
Thursday. She later said the tank was holding pygas, a byproduct of oil
refining, and remains about half full.
Efforts to move the substance are ongoing, but heat left over from the 4-day blaze is delaying that process.
“It’s still very warm from the fires,” she said. “We are sending a
drone over to see the temperatures right now, so everything is evolving.
But this was a fire, and it takes a little bit of time.”
Before the fire, Intercontinental’s tank farm could hold as much as
13 million barrels of oil products and chemicals along the Houston Ship
Channel. The black smoke plume that towered over Houston posed no risk
to residents, local official said.
When ignited, benzene “just burns into carbon dioxide and water, just
like anything else,” Dr. Stephen Harding, assistant professor of
emergency medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. “Once
you’ve controlled the fire, you’ve now got damaged tanks containing the
benzene which may be leaching into the air, now that it’s no longer
being burned off.”
Part of State Highway 225, which many workers use to get to work at
nearby refineries and terminals, was shut until Deer Park lifted its
order. The highway closure affected an 8-mile stretch through the heart
of refining and chemical country, snarling traffic all over the east
side of Houston.
--With assistance from Barbara Powell, Mario Parker, Ben Foldy, Kevin Crowley and Jack Kaskey.
To contact the reporters on this story: Joe Carroll in Houston at
jcarroll8@bloomberg.net;David Wethe in Houston at
dwethe@bloomberg.net;Rachel Adams-Heard in Houston at
radamsheard@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: David Marino at dmarino4@bloomberg.net, Joe Carroll, Simon Casey
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