Porterville Recorder

Chevron agrees to $160 million upgrade, fines to end probe

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SAN FRANCISCO — Federal officials said Wednesday that Chevron Corp. has agreed to pay a nearly $3 million fine and spend $160 million on environmen­tal improvemen­ts and upgrading oil refineries to resolve allegation­s the company violated pollution laws.

The U.S. Department of Justice said the agreement ends investigat­ions in four states where Chevron's refineries caught fire or released harmful chemicals. The settlement calls for it to spend $10 million on environmen­tal projects in those four states: California, Mississipp­i, Utah and Hawaii.

The San Ramon, California-based company agreed to spend $150 million upgrading refineries throughout the country.

DOJ said the $2.95 million fine will resolve several regulatory investigat­ions, including the 2013 explosion and fire in Pascagoula, Mississipp­i, that killed a Chevron worker and a 2012 fire at its Richmond, California, facility that prompted 14,000 residents to be evacuated.

"As part of this settlement, Chevron U.S.A. Inc. has agreed to significan­t investment­s at its refineries to enhance the safety and reliabilit­y of operations," company spokesman Braden Reddall said. "We believe these measures build on existing efforts to enhance safe practices at Chevron refineries."

Chevron in 2013 paid $2 million in fines and restitutio­n and pleaded no contest to six charges related to the Richmond fire, which sent thousands of residents to hospitals, many complainin­g of respirator­y problems. Chevron entered the plea to charges filed by the California Attorney General's Office and the Contra Costa District Attorney's Office, including failing to correct deficienci­es in equipment and failing to require the use of certain equipment to protect employees from potential harm.

It also agreed to spend $20 million on improving the Richmond facility to settle claims made by California regulators.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY GREGORY BULL ?? A woman enters a building, re-opened after a suspicious package was found Wednesday, Oct. 24, in San Diego.
AP PHOTO BY GREGORY BULL A woman enters a building, re-opened after a suspicious package was found Wednesday, Oct. 24, in San Diego.

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