Residents
look on at the plume of smoke rising from a fire at the
Intercontinental Terminals petrochemical storage site in Deer Park,
Texas on March 19.Photographer: Scott Dalton/Bloomberg
A three-day petrochemical fire that spread a cancer-causing chemical and thick smoke over Houston suburbs this week has spurred calls for tougher safety regulations that could affect a nearly dozen crude-export terminals proposed for the U.S. Gulf Coast.
Federal, state and local officials have begun investigating whether
Mitsui & Co’s Intercontinental Terminals Co (ITC) met safety and
environmental regulations after the fire in Deer Park, Texas, spread
quickly among rows of giant tanks that hold up to 3.3 million gallons of
fuel each.
The blaze released toxic benzene which led five school systems with
more than 108,000 students to shut for two days, and prompted two cities
to tell residents to stay indoors.
It burned for three days and destroyed 11 tanks holding fuels used to
make gasoline and plastics that sat along the nation’s busiest
petrochemical port and among nine oil refineries.
On Friday, a leak from a containment dike at the facility prompted
new travel restrictions in the immediate vicinity of the plant.
Results from those reviews could affect proposed terminals that would
add millions of barrels of oil storage capacity, to cater to a shale
boom that has made the United States the world’s top oil producer with
more than 12 million barrels pumped each day.
There are already some 90 million barrels of oil storage capacity in
above-ground tanks near Houston, estimates data provider Genscape.
Harris County, which oversees the ITC tank farm, plans to review the
investigations and may propose changes to state regulations, said the
county’s chief executive, Lina Hidalgo.
Environmental groups said the fire and lack of notice to residents
exposed Texas’s weak oversight of energy and chemical storage sites.
“I would like to think there will be a huge push and elected officials would do their due diligence,” said Elena Craft, senior director for climate and health at the Environmental Defense Fund. “We want accountability,” said Bryan Parras, a spokesman for environmental group Sierra Club.
ITC, which had 242 storage tanks holding about 13 million barrels of
fuels, is not required to comply with county fire codes because it was
built before the county adopted codes in late 2014, said Rachel Moreno, a
spokeswoman for the county Fire Marshal.
ITC adheres to fire-prevention guidelines set by industry group the
National Fire Prevention Association and the American Petroleum
Institute, said ITC spokeswoman Alice Richardson. A temporary loss of
water pressure on the first day of the blaze contributed to its spread.
However, critics say the NFPA guidelines set minimum standards and
the use of advanced fire-protection systems could have more quickly
extinguished the fire before it spread and released millions of tons of
carbon monoxide, and thousands of pounds of nitrogen oxides, sulfur
dioxide and other pollutants.
The fire prevention group expects the investigations into the ITC
fire could prompt changes to its guidelines, said Guy Colonna, NFPA’s
senior director of engineering. Its existing recommendation for
petrochemical tanks, called NFPA 30, does not require fixed fire
suppressants, Colonna said.
State and local governments “need to amend the minimum
requirements to hold companies like ITC more accountable for building
terminals in areas where the severity of the fire is going to cause a
bigger disaster,” said Marcelo D’Amico, a principal at Orcus Fire and Risk Inc, which designs fire-prevention systems for tank farms.
New storage regulations would face opposition in Texas. A state
lawmaker recently filed a bill that would speed air-quality permit
reviews for energy projects before environmental regulator Texas
Commission on Environment Quality, one of the groups now investigating
ITC.
Ryan Sitton, commissioner of Texas energy regulator, the Railroad
Commission, said more fire-suppression equipment on ITC tanks could have
led to greater releases of benzene, not less.
“The big fire was burning off the benzene,” Sitton said. “If
I start mandating things to put out fires, it could run the risk” of
releasing more chemicals into the atmosphere.
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