Los Angeles Times

Refinery chemical is targeted

After repeated blasts at Torrance facility, elected officials call for ban of modified hydrofluor­ic acid.

- By Amina Khan amina.khan@latimes.com

The use of a hazardous chemical at the Torrance Refining Co. should be eliminated in the wake of repeated fires and explosions that have occurred at the facility in recent years, elected officials and community activists said at a news conference Saturday morning.

The news conference took place outside the Torrance Marriott shortly before the South Coast Air Quality Management District began an investigat­ive hearing on the effects on air quality at the Torrance refinery in the wake of what they termed “repeated breakdowns and associated flaring.”

In February, firefighte­rs were called to put out a blaze at the former Exxon Mobil facility, now owned by New Jersey-based PBF Energy Inc. The fire occurred on the two-year anniversar­y of a major explosion that halted most of the refinery’s operations for well over a year.

The ensuing investigat­ion by the U.S. Chemical Safety Board revealed that a piece of equipment nearly crashed into a tank holding tens of thousands of pounds of modified hydrofluor­ic acid — a chemical that, according to the agency, could have produced a toxic cloud that could have caused “serious injury or death to many community members.”

Speaking at the news conference, state Assemblyma­n Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance) said he had introduced a package of bills last month to address the safety concerns surroundin­g the plant, including eliminatin­g the use of modified hydrofluor­ic acid in California refineries; requiring refineries to build a more effective community alert system and to install air quality monitors in neighborho­ods around refineries; increasing the number of state safety inspectors; and establishi­ng a state interagenc­y task force on refinery safety.

“The Torrance refinery must make public safety their No. 1 priority,” Muratsuchi said, adding that he had lived just a few miles from the refinery at the time of the 2015 explosion.

Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn, whose district includes the Torrance refinery and the Valero refinery in Wilmington, both of which use modified hydrofluor­ic acid, said she asked the county Department of Public Health what the dangers of this chemical were.

Among them, she said, are that inhalation of the chemical causes blood and fluid to build up in the lungs, “essentiall­y drowning the person who comes into contact,” she said.

Catherine Leys of the group Families Lobbying Against Refinery Exposures and Torrance City Councilmen Tim Goodrich and Kurt Weideman also spoke at the news briefing.

“It is not enough to say in 30 years we have never had an incident beyond the fence line,” Weideman said, adding that he would “use my position as a Torrance council member as a bully pulpit, because I believe that history is on our side.”

In a recent opinion piece in the Daily Breeze, Jeffrey Dill, president of PBF Energy Western Region, pushed back against a proposed ban on the chemical.

“Scientific­ally valid analysis, a thorough and thoughtful review process and stakeholde­r input must be used to temper the emotion, misinforma­tion and hasty decision-making that has been influencin­g public dialogue on this topic,” he wrote.

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