East Bay Times

Flaring will continue at refining company

It says shutdown of a process unit will last a few days

- By Jason Green jason.green @bayareanew­sgroup.com Bay City News Service contribute­d to this report.

MARTINEZ >> Flaring was reported late Tuesday at a refinery operated by the Martinez Refining Co., and officials confirmed Wednesday that it would continue over the next week.

“We are in the process of temporaril­y shutting down one of our process units at the Martinez refinery,” refinery spokespers­on Brandon Matson said Wednesday morning. “The shutdown process will take a few days, during which there will be intermitte­nt flaring to ensure the unit is brought down in a safe and controlled manner, following standard procedures. All appropriat­e agencies have been notified.”

Matson said following the unit's shutdown, employees and contractor partners will safely conduct maintenanc­e work over the next few weeks. Following completion of the work, they will restart the unit, during which intermitte­nt flaring will occur again for a few days until the restart is complete.

“The associated flaring with the restart will again be primarily clean-combusting treated process gas,” Matson said. “Prior to unit restart, we will notify appropriat­e agencies and issue another community update.”

The company acknowledg­ed the flaring in a statement that was posted to social media just before 10 p.m. Tuesday.

The refinery has been under scrutiny for several recent incidents. On Dec. 26,

Contra Costa Health Services and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District officials paid a surprise visit to observe the facility's operations, reliabilit­y and safety programs.

The inspection followed flaring in mid-December and a “coke dust” release in October. The latter incident, which nearly led to the cancellati­on of a local high school homecoming parade, was the third of its kind since July.

The refinery has been in the news since Thanksgivi­ng 2022, when flaring at the facility caused a white powdery substance to rain down on the surroundin­g area. Tests revealed it contained higher than normal amounts of heavy metals that can cause respirator­y issues.

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