Houston Chronicle

Pruitt to ditch chemical plant safety rules

Chemical makers applaud action as critics assail it

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

EPA administra­tor Scott Pruitt moves to rescind a series of safety measures proposed for chemical plants nationwide after a deadly blast at a Texas fertilizer plant.

WASHINGTON — Environmen­tal Protection Agency administra­tor Scott Pruitt moved Thursday to rescind a series of safety measures proposed for chemical plants nationwide after a deadly blast at a Texas fertilizer plant.

Pruitt signed a significan­tly revised slate of rules from the Obama era on safety and risk management at 12,500 U.S. facilities, including chemical plants and refineries. A chemical manufactur­ing group welcomed the changes, while spokesman Alex Formuzis of the Environmen­tal Working Group called them a “hollowing out” of the original safety upgrades.

The rules were prompted by a 2013 explosion at a fertilizer plant in West that killed 15 people. The blast ripped open a 90foot-wide crater and hurled debris for miles.

Pruitt’s changes eliminate several of the original requiremen­ts concerning safety training, accident prevention and accident investigat­ions.

The revised version signed by Pruitt also would remove a requiremen­t that members of the public who ask the plants should receive informatio­n about any chemical risks and community emergency plans.

That change “would make it harder for those living near these plants to get basic informatio­n” about any dangers posed, said Eric Schaeffer, director of the Washington­based Environmen­tal Integrity Project nonprofit.

In a statement, Pruitt said the revised slate of proposed rules “reduce unnecessar­y regulatory burdens.”

“Accident prevention is a top priority at EPA, and this proposed rule will ensure proper emergency planning and continue the trend of fewer significan­t accidents involving chemicals,” Pruitt said.

Pruitt signed the rule surrounded by onlookers, including chemical-industry representa­tives.

The Society of Chemical Manufactur­ers and Affiliates, which said in a statement it had opposed the initial version of the regulation proposed by the Obama administra­tion, applauded the revision signed Thursday, saying the action modified a requiremen­t for outside audits of risk-management plans and other rules that the chemical manufactur­ers group had objected to.

The Trump administra­tion will solicit public comment on the proposed rules before it makes final decisions on enacting them.

 ??  ?? The 2013 fertilizer plant blast in West killed 15 people.
The 2013 fertilizer plant blast in West killed 15 people.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States