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FROTH AND BUBBLE
Living, and coughing, downwind of Texas smoke stacks
by Staff Writers
Port Arthur, Texas (AFP) Nov 10, 2011


When the black smoke pours out of the Texan oil refinery across the road in yet another unplanned discharge, Erma Lee Ellas has just one way to try to keep the cloud of chemicals from reaching her asthmatic lungs: "I close the door."

Port Arthur, Texas has some of the dirtiest air in the United States. Some people like to say it's the smell of money. For residents like 78-year-old Ellas, it brings sickness and pain.

Texas Governor and White House hopeful Rick Perry is among those who, critics say, don't seem to mind the stench.

While Perry may be trailing in the polls to win the Republican nomination, his desire to dismantle the federal Environmental Protection Agency -- which he calls a "jobs cemetery" -- is popular among the party's conservative base.

If the Republicans manage to unseat President Barack Obama in the 2012 election, regulatory rollbacks and cuts to the agency's enforcement activities are expected to follow.

There are few places in the United States where the impacts of loose environmental regulation are more deeply felt than Texas, observers say.

Texas emits far more greenhouse gases than any other state -- thanks in part to its heavy reliance on coal-powered electrical plants -- and has built its economy on the back of dirty industries like oil and chemicals.

Critics say oversight is lax, permits are issued with scant review and there is little incentive for companies to abide by environmental rules because fines are rarely imposed and are typically just a fraction of the cost of compliance.

State regulators say results -- not fines -- are the best way to judge effectiveness.

"If all that stuff was true then air quality wouldn't be getting better," says Terry Clawson, a spokesman for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.

-- "Protecting public health gets left by the wayside" --

But while overall emissions are certainly down, the scale is still high, as are the number of unplanned and unpermitted discharges.

There were 2,553 "emission events" in Texas last year which poured 44.6 million pounds of contaminants into the sky. The state took enforcement action in 123 of those incidents and issued violation notices in 172 others.

BP's decision to continue refinery operations after a fire at its troubled Texas City plant knocked out critical pollution controls for 40 days last year is one of the few instances where the state sought civil penalties beyond fines that are usually limited to a maximum of $10,000 a day.

No action was taken by regulators to push BP to shut down operations rather than simply burn the gases in a flare, nor was BP required to notify local officials because "fenceline" monitors did not show a significant spike in hazardous pollution levels, records show.

"When you have a loose environmental regulatory scheme such as we have in Texas, what you have is the people who are supposed to watch out for the public interest... really don't give adequate review," says Ken Kramer, director of the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club.

"So a lot of the necessary things for protecting public health get left by the wayside."

-- "Put a wet towel over their nose just to breathe" --

With little help from state regulators, residents of Port Arthur have taken environmental monitoring into their own hands.

Port Arthur has been a home for the nation's oil refinery industry since 1901. Eight major petrochemical and hazardous waste facilities surround the predominantly African-American West Side neighborhood, where cancer and asthma rates are among the highest in Texas and income levels are among the lowest.

Even on a good day, the air is heavy with a nasty smell that can quickly clog the sinuses.

Armed with air monitors made out of buckets and plastic bags, a small band of environmental activists began taking air samples after "upsets" and sending them to independent labs for testing more than a decade ago.

They've had some substantial victories, like getting Shell's Motiva to install new pollution controls, pay for annual health check-ups and set up a $3.5 million economic development fund after a bitter battle over a massive expansion plan.

But kids are still getting sick while factory owners postpone maintenance and upgrades that could cut down on the number of times plants spew dangerous levels of toxins into the air.

"At least three times a month one of these facilities will have an emissions event that dumps tons of toxins into the air that supersedes the clean air laws," says activist Hilton Kelly, who recently won the prestigious Goldman prize for his work with the Community In-power and Development Association.

"A lot of the time what we find is the state looks the other way and they'll tell you it was nothing to worry about even though a lot of the citizens in this community have to put a wet towel over their nose just to breathe."

While state officials say even the smelliest emissions rarely reach hazardous levels, Kelly is worried about the long-term health impacts of chronic exposure.

But he doesn't want to shut down the refineries. His community needs the jobs, even if most of the people who work there end up driving out of town at the end of the day.

The solution, he says, is for the plants to adopt existing technologies and maintain a focus on "best practices" so pollution levels can continue to come down.

In the meantime, Kelly wants local officials to move the tidy public housing complex he grew up in farther away from the smoke stacks. There's something not right about having a playground across the street from a refinery.

Related Links
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up




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US lawmakers eye oil spill payment from neighbors
Washington (AFP) Nov 9, 2011 - Two US senators introduced a bill Wednesday seeking to guarantee compensation for any oil spill originating in waters outside the United States, as Cuba aims to strike black gold off its north coast.

In theory, the bill could involve any US neighbor, from Mexico to the Bahamas or Canada.

But it is Cuba's new, promising drive for oil -- which could potentially turn it from a poor, isolated communist outpost into a flush oil-exporting neighbor after decades of dependency on allies -- that has US lawmakers riled and worried.

Particularly after the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, US interests across the Gulf coast fear that the island largely dependent on Venezuelan assistance does not have the finances or knowhow to stop an environmental disaster in the event of a major oil spill.

Despite tense ties between the United States and Cuba, the only one-party Communist regime in the Americas, Cuban authorities in recent months have quietly cooperated with US authorities worried as Spain's Repsol eyes test drilling offshore north of Havana as soon as next month.

Michael Bromwich of the Interior Department's Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement told a congressional panel last week that US officials have reached an agreement with Cuba to inspect an oil rig that Havana intends to use for offshore drilling.

"Repsol has offered US agencies an opportunity to board the Scarabeo 9 rig that Repsol intends to use in Cuban waters to inspect the vessel and drilling equipment and to review relevant documentation," he told a House Natural Resources Committee hearing.

"Given the proximity of drilling to US waters, and considering the serious consequences a major oil spill would have on our economic and environmental interests, we have welcomed the opportunity to gather information on the rig's operation, technology and safety equipment."

On Wednesday, Demnocrats Florida Senator Bill Nelson and New Jersey Senator Bob Menendez introduced their Foreign Oil Pollution Act.

"There shall be no limitation on liability under this act for any incident involving a foreign offshore unit in which oil is discharged and enters or poses a substantial threat to enter the navigable waters or the exclusive economic zone," it reads in part.

Menendez said the measure means that "companies seeking to drill in Cuban waters will think twice once they know they would be fully liable for any damages to the Florida Keys, South Florida beaches, or if the spill reached the Gulf Stream, anywhere up the East Coast."

Though it has a broader scope, Nelson acknowledged that the bill is "in part aimed at the situation in Cuba, where Repsol is planning to drill."

The move came a year and a half after an explosion at a BP-operated well in the Gulf of Mexico led to the worst environmental accident in the history of the oil industry.

Officials said the inspection could take place before the end of the year, with drilling possible soon after.

Daniel Whittle of the non-governmental Environmental Defense Fund, which has held discussions with Havana on the plans, told the committee that the Cuban government "made clear its determination to begin exploratory activities this year" and that up to six exploratory wells may be drilled between 2011 and 2013.

Cuba has long been plagued by energy dependence that amounts to its economic Achilles' heel.

Havana depended on the Soviet bloc for cut-rate oil for decades and plunged into economic chaos and blackouts when it was cut off after 1989.

Some studies estimate Cuba has probable reserves of between five and nine billion barrels of oil in its economic zone in the Gulf of Mexico. Cuban authorities have said their crude reserves are as high as 20 billion barrels.



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FROTH AND BUBBLE
Decline in dead zones: Efforts to heal Chesapeake Bay are working
Baltimore MD (SPX) Nov 10, 2011
Efforts to reduce the flow of fertilizers, animal waste and other pollutants into the Chesapeake Bay appear to be giving a boost to the bay's health, a new study that analyzed 60 years of water quality data has concluded. The study, published in the November 2011 issue of Estuaries and Coasts, was conducted by researchers from the Johns Hopkins University and the University of Maryland Center fo ... read more


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