Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Problems at Superior oil refinery were known before 2018 explosion

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

SUPERIOR – Officials at a northweste­rn Wisconsin oil refinery knew about equipment issues years before a 2018 explosion there, according to Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion documents obtained by Wisconsin Public Radio.

WPR secured nearly 1,300 pages of documents from OSHA that shed new light on what those officials knew in the days leading up to the explosion at the refinery in Superior, as well as what equipment issues they were aware of years earlier. They include problems with a critical valve malfunctio­ning days before the explosion and documented erosion on that piece of equipment dating back to 2008.

The April 26, 2018, blast injured 36 refinery employees and contractor­s and forced the evacuation of many of Superior’s 27,000 residents because of black smoke and fears that a tank containing the highly toxic chemical hydrogen fluoride might be compromise­d.

The refinery was shutting down its fluid catalytic cracking unit when the explosion happened as it prepared for a five-week production break for maintenanc­e. The unit uses heat and a catalyst to crack or break apart large hydrocarbo­ns of crude oil into smaller molecules to make gasoline and other products.

In August 2018, the U.S. Chemical Safety Board said internal wear on the spent catalyst slide valve likely caused the explosion by failing to separate air and hydrocarbo­ns between the reactor and regenerato­r.

The refinery was aware of erosion on that valve during past turnaround­s for at least a decade, according to a 2018 report from OSHA’s Health Response Team.

“According to interviews and records, holes were found in the spent slide valve on two past turnaround­s (April 2008 and April 2013), and those interviewe­d indicated that they were aware that this valve could leak because of catalyst erosion on the leading edge of the valve gate and seat ring,” the report states.

In the week leading up to the explosion, workers noted in operator logs that the valve was malfunctio­ning. Problems with the valve resulted in the shutdown of the refinery’s pollution control device on April 19 and April 22.

Last year, Cenovus Energy became the new owner of the refinery after it bought Husky Energy. Company officials said they have since taken steps to improve safety.

 ?? KING / DULUTH NEWS TRIBUNE BOB ?? The Husky Energy refinery burns as seen in this aerial photo from April 2018.
KING / DULUTH NEWS TRIBUNE BOB The Husky Energy refinery burns as seen in this aerial photo from April 2018.

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