San Francisco Chronicle

Chemical plant: Explosions, fire rock waterlogge­d facility near Houston.

- By Gregory Bull, Emily Schmall and Reese Dunklin Gregory Bull, Emily Schmall and Reese Dunklin are Associated Press writers.

CROSBY, Texas — Explosions and fires rocked a flood-crippled chemical plant near Houston early Thursday, sending up a plume of acrid, eye-irritating smoke and adding a new hazard to Hurricane Harvey’s aftermath.

The plant’s owners warned more explosions could follow because a loss of refrigerat­ion was causing chemicals stored there to degrade and burn.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency and local officials said an analysis of the air for toxic materials found no reason for alarm. And there were no immediate reports of any serious injuries.

Dozens of workers were pulled out of the Arkema Inc. plant before the hurricane hit, and a small crew of 11 that had been left behind was evacuated before the blasts for fear of just such a disaster. Officials had also ordered people living within 1½ miles to leave on Tuesday.

Fire and plant officials said the substances that caught fire were organic peroxides, a family of volatile compounds used for making a variety of products, including pharmaceut­icals and constructi­on materials.

Authoritie­s urged residents downwind to stay indoors with the windows closed to avoid inhaling the smoke.

Earlier this week, French-owned Arkema warned an explosion was imminent at the plant about 25 miles northeast of Houston, saying Harvey’s floodwater­s had knocked out power and backup generators, disabling the refrigerat­ion needed to keep the organic peroxides stable.

On Thursday, Rich Rennard, an executive at Arkema, said the chemical compounds were transferre­d to refrigerat­ed containers after power was lost. But he said those containers failed too, causing the chemicals in one unit to burn.

He said the company expected more explosions from the eight remaining containers.

The plant is along a stretch near Houston that contains one of the biggest concentrat­ions of refineries, pipelines and chemical plants in the country.

Andrea Morrow, a spokeswoma­n for the Texas Commission on Environmen­tal Quality, said the agency had received “no other reports of concern” from other chemical plants in the state.

The blaze at Arkema sent up 30- to 40-foot flames and black smoke, according to fire officials. Harris County Fire Marshal spokeswoma­n Rachel Moreno put the quantity of burning organic peroxide at 2 tons.

The EPA sent employees to monitor the situation and said air samples collected by aircraft showed “there are no concentrat­ions of concern for toxic materials reported at this time.”

The EPA’s analysis followed comments from Brock Long, administra­tor of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, who told reporters in Washington that “by all means, the plume is incredibly dangerous.” Asked about the discrepanc­y, a FEMA spokesman said Brock would defer to officials closer to the scene.

 ?? Godofredo A. Vasquez / Associated Press ?? The Arkema chemical plant lost power, leaving it without refrigerat­ion for chemicals that became volatile as temperatur­es rose.
Godofredo A. Vasquez / Associated Press The Arkema chemical plant lost power, leaving it without refrigerat­ion for chemicals that became volatile as temperatur­es rose.
 ?? Gregory Bull / Associated Press ?? Frances Breaux cries as she talks about her fears for two close friends who live near the Arkema Inc. chemical plant in Crosby, Texas. Breaux said her friends have not been heard from.
Gregory Bull / Associated Press Frances Breaux cries as she talks about her fears for two close friends who live near the Arkema Inc. chemical plant in Crosby, Texas. Breaux said her friends have not been heard from.

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