Las Vegas Review-Journal

Fuel drained from underwater Pearl Harbor leak

- By Audrey Mcavoy

HONOLULU — The U.S. military said it’s finished draining million of gallons of fuel from an undergroun­d fuel tank complex in Hawaii that poisoned 6,000 people when it leaked jet fuel into Pearl Harbor’s drinking water in 2021.

Joint Task Force Red Hill began defueling the tanks in October after completing months of repairs to an aging network of pipes to prevent the World War Ii-era facility from springing more leaks while it drained 104 million gallons of fuel from the tanks.

The task force was scheduled to hand over responsibi­lity for the tanks on Thursday to Navy Closure Task Force-red Hill. This new command, led by Rear Adm. Stephen D. Barnett, is charged with permanentl­y decommissi­oning the tanks, cleaning up the environmen­t and restoring the aquifer underneath.

Vice Adm. John Wade, the commander of the task force that drained the tanks, said in a recorded video released Wednesday that Barnett understand­s “the enormity and importance” of the job.

Wade said the new task force’s mission was to “safely and expeditiou­sly close the facility to ensure clean water and to conduct the necessary long-term environmen­tal remediatio­n.”

The military agreed to drain the tanks after the 2021 spill sparked an outcry in Hawaii and concerns about the threat the tanks posed to Honolulu’s water supply. The tanks sit above an aquifer supplying water to 400,000 people in urban Honolulu, including Waikiki and downtown.

The military built the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility in the side of a mountain ridge to shield the fuel tanks from aerial attack. Each of the 20 tanks is equivalent in height to a 25-story building and can hold 12.5 million gallons.

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