The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Tank failures reveal vulnerabil­ities in storm

- By Matthew Brown and Larry Fenn Associated Press Correspond­ent Matthew Brown reported from Billings, Montana. AP data journalist Larry Fenn reported from New York City.

More than two dozen storage tanks holding crude oil, gasoline and other contaminan­ts ruptured or otherwise failed when Harvey slammed into the Texas coast, spilling at least 145,000 gallons of fuel and spewing toxic pollutants into the air, according to an Associated Press analysis of pollution reports submitted to state and federal regulators.

The tank failures follow years of warnings that the Houston area’s petrochemi­cal industry was ill-prepared for a major storm, with about one-third of the 4,500 storage tanks along the Houston Ship Channel located in areas susceptibl­e to flooding, according to researcher­s.

More of the massive storage tanks could be put to the test in coming days as Hurricane Irma bears down on Florida. The tanks are prone to float and break during floods, and Harvey’s unpreceden­ted rainfalls revealed a new vulnerabil­ity when the roofs of some storage tanks sank under the weight of so much water.

Federal and state rules require companies to be prepared for spills, but mandate no specific measures to secure storage tanks at refineries, chemical plants and oil production sites.

Although Florida has no oil refineries, it has more than 20 petroleum product storage terminals in coastal communitie­s and about 30 chemical companies with a presence in the state, including a significan­t number of facilities in the Tampa Bay area, according to the American Chemistry Council and U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

“Tampa Bay is one of the most vulnerable cities in the country” to hurricanes, said John Pardue, a Louisiana State University professor who has researched problems with storage tanks during storms.

“But there’s no requiremen­t that says when you’re in a hurricane zone you’ve got to do things differentl­y,” Pardue added. “If we’re going to continue to put some of these facilities in harm’s way, it would be great to have some specific regulation­s” to safeguard storage tanks.

The storm surge from Harvey was small enough that the refineries in the Houston Ship Channel appear to have avoided the huge spills associated with past storms such as Hurricane Katrina, when ruptured storage tanks released several millions of gallons of oil including into residentia­l areas, according to Jamie Padgett, an associate professor at Rice University who has inventorie­d the Houston Ship Channel’s storage tanks.

One difference during Harvey was that prior to the storm, some refineries apparently were able to fill up their storage tanks to make them less buoyant and therefore less prone to floating and being damaged, said Kyle Isakower, vice president of regulatory policy at the American Petroleum Institute.

That wasn’t the case with about a dozen smaller storage tanks that experience­d spills in Fayette County west of Houston, said Ron Whitmire with EnerVest, the Houstonbas­ed company that operated the tanks. The capacity of those tanks ranged from about 250 to 400 barrels, which he said was not large enough to resist the force of the floodwater­s that swept them away.

“Do we plan for storms and hurricanes? Absolutely,” Whitmire said. “But nobody plans for 50plus inches of rain.”

The record rainfall also exposed problems among almost 400 large storage tanks in the Houston area that have “floating roofs” that go up or down depending on how much fuel is inside the containers. The unpreceden­ted rains that came with Harvey caused 14 of those roofs to sink, in some instances allowing the chemicals inside them to escape, according to company reports and Padgett of Rice.

There are no government rules dictating how tanks are designed. But the American Petroleum Institute has establishe­d industry standards for tank constructi­on that call for tanks to be able to drain at a minimum 10 inches of rain over a 24-hour period. Rain was falling at more than twice that rate during Harvey, Padgett said.

At least two of the floating roof failures occurred in gasoline storage tanks at Shell Oil’s Deer Park refinery and another occurred at Exxon Mobil’s Baytown refinery.

Pollution reports submitted by the companies to Texas regulators blamed the roof problems on Harvey’s excess rainfall. The reports said air pollutants including benzene, toluene and xylene were released into the atmosphere. Long-term exposure to such pollutants can cause cancer, although Texas officials said they never reached concentrat­ions high enough in the storm’s wake to cause health concerns.

A Shell representa­tive said in a statement to the AP that the roof problems presented an “extremely rare” circumstan­ce and that company workers had quickly responded by spraying the spilled fuel with foam to suppress any harmful vapors. All the gasoline that was released was contained onsite, Shell spokesman Ray Fisher said.

Exxon Mobil spokeswoma­n Charlotte Huffaker said safety was a priority for the company and it was able to lessen environmen­tal damage from Harvey by shutting down equipment in advance. Huffaker did not directly respond to emailed questions about the sinking roof on the Baytown tank.

As state and federal officials investigat­e the impacts from Harvey, it’s uncertain how much spilled material flowed off-site from the storage yards, oil production areas and refineries.

It’s expected to take about two weeks from the time of the spills for any contaminat­ion in the ship channel to reach Galveston Bay, according to Hanadi Rifai, director of the graduate program in environmen­tal engineerin­g at the University of Houston.

Texas has rules governing protection­s for undergroun­d storage tanks during floods, but not for above-ground tanks found at many refineries and chemical plants, according to Andrea Morrow, a spokeswoma­n for the Texas Commission on Environmen­tal Quality.

Morrow declined to say if the agency planned to investigat­e the Harveyrela­ted tank failures and whether tanks that failed had been properly secured before the storm.

“We have establishe­d a Unified Command with other state and federal partners, and are in the field conducting rapid needs assessment at this time,” she said. “Due to the widespread impact from Harvey, the TCEQ anticipate­s conducting many storm-related investigat­ions over the next several months.”

 ?? TOM FOX — THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS VIA AP, FILE ?? Large storage tanks situated in retention ponds are surrounded by rainwater left behind by Tropical Storm Harvey at ExxonMobil’s refinery in Baytown, Texas. Companies have reported that roughly two dozen storage tanks holding crude oil, gasoline and...
TOM FOX — THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS VIA AP, FILE Large storage tanks situated in retention ponds are surrounded by rainwater left behind by Tropical Storm Harvey at ExxonMobil’s refinery in Baytown, Texas. Companies have reported that roughly two dozen storage tanks holding crude oil, gasoline and...
 ?? GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A flame burns at the Shell Deer Park oil refinery in Deer Park, Texas. Companies have reported that roughly two dozen storage tanks holding crude oil, gasoline and other fuels collapsed or otherwise failed during Harvey, spilling a combined 140,000...
GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A flame burns at the Shell Deer Park oil refinery in Deer Park, Texas. Companies have reported that roughly two dozen storage tanks holding crude oil, gasoline and other fuels collapsed or otherwise failed during Harvey, spilling a combined 140,000...

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