Friday, September 27, 2019

IMELDA NOT ONLY FUCKED UP THE MAIL, BUT THE BITCH ALSO FUCKED UP THE ENVIRONMENT

State records show thousands of pounds of pollutants released during Imelda

By Robert Arnold

Click2Houston
September 26, 2019

HOUSTON - Texas environmental records show several refineries and chemical plants reported the unauthorized release of thousands of pounds of pollutants during Tropical Storm Imelda.

Air emission event reports show at least 10 facilities in Harris, Brazoria, Jefferson and Orange counties directly listed Imelda as the cause of the releases. These facilities combined reported approximately 75,000 pounds of pollutants were released over a four-day period.

Other facilities report emissions during this window but did not specifically list the tropical storm as a direct cause.

What type of pollutants were released?

A variety of compounds were released during the storm, including Benzene, Carbon Monoxide and Butadiene, 1-3. The single largest release was reported by the ExxonMobil facility in Beaumont.

State records show approximately 36,000 pounds were released "as a result of adverse weather conditions caused by Tropical Storm Imelda, a process unit compressor tripped causing a unit shutdown event."

Other facilities reported lightning strikes and rising floodwaters as causes for these events.

What is the state saying about the releases?

Officials with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality told KPRC that aerial and hand-held monitoring showed there was no danger to the public as of Thursday. Governor Greg Abbott temporarily suspended certain environmental rules for facilities in affected areas, as he did after Hurricane Harvey.

When TCEQ requested the rule suspension on Sept. 19, officials wrote that "such suspension is requested only to the extent the rules actually do prevent, hinder or delay necessary action in coping with this disaster."

The rule suspension remains in place Thursday. When asked how long the suspension would last TCEQ officials wrote, "communities in areas impacted by Tropical Storm Imelda are still in the process of recovering from this disaster.

The state's and TCEQ's response to Tropical Storm Imelda is also ongoing, as they move into the cleanup and recovery phase. You can read more about the rule suspension on the TCEQ website.

A disagreement with the state

"This does not give me any comfort," said Dr. Bakeyah Nelson, executive director for Air Alliance Houston. "I think what everyone needs to know is that there is no level of air pollution that is quote unquote safe."

Nelson worries about the cumulative effects of these incidents, given major fires and corresponding emissions at tank yards and refineries earlier this year.

"They impact our air quality, they impact our water quality, the impact the soil," said Nelson. "We have an expanding industry, we have more frequent storms, and we're all living in this region, and we're all impacted by it."

EDITOR’S NOTE: When may we expect 16-year-old Swedish eco warrior Greta Thunberg to come to Houston to demand that the petro-chemical industry in Houston and southeast Texas be eradicated?

As for the mail, Thursday was the first day since Wednesday a week ago that I received any first-class mail. I’m concerned that some of my bills may have been destroyed when the Houston area Postal sorting and distribution center’s roof collapsed. And the same goes for the payments I made.

2 comments:

bob walsh said...

Mother nature has no consideration for mother nature.

Trey Rusk said...

The pollutants were wide spread. Most of the tanks of chemicals had berms around them but were defeated by high water. Our area has had at least two severe chemical plant fires this year. Air pollution caused by these fires will never really be known because the monitoring stations were down during the event. Coincidence? Money almost always trumps safety. If you don't think so check out the million dollar homes in the neighborhoods near the plants. There are none. Just dilapidated WWII era shotgun shacks filled with poor people that have no place to go. Now check out the neighborhoods with the highest rates of cancer. I think you will find a pretty close match. By the time the chemical plant blows the warning siren, it's over.
May be the "Shelter in Place" warning should be replaced with "Die in Place."