The Guardian (USA)

Texas: city residents urged to evacuate after chemical plant explosions

- Guardian staff and agencies

Authoritie­s in the Texas city of Port Neches have issued an order encouragin­g its 50,000 residents to evacuate due to concerns over air quality after a pair of chemical plant explosions occurred last week.

Port Neches issued the voluntary evacuation order late on Wednesday after elevated levels of the chemical butadiene were detected. Jefferson county emergency management officials said the elevated levels did not pose a serious health risk, but could cause dizziness, nausea, headaches or irritation to the eyes and throat.

Butadiene is a chemical used to make synthetic rubber and other products.

The first explosion happened early 27 November at the TPC Group plant about 80 miles (129km) east of Houston and was so powerful it shattered windows and ripped doors off hinges of nearby homes. A second blast occurred about 13 hours later, and the fire was not contained until 29 November.

The blast sent a huge plume of smoke into the air that was visible for miles.

The explosion was the latest in a series of high-profile accidents this year up and down the Texas Gulf coast, which is home to the highest concentrat­ion of oil refineries in the country.

In July, an explosion at an ExxonMobil refinery in Baytown left more than dozen people with minor injuries and put nearby residents under a shelter-in-place advisory for three hours.

The recurring explosions have renewed calls by coastal residents and critics for tougher industry oversight. On Thursday, a report released by a Washington-based environmen­tal watchdog concluded that since 2008, only Wisconsin has made deeper cuts to the budgets of state environmen­tal regulators than Texas.

The Texas commission on environmen­tal quality has cut funding for pollution control programs by 35% over the past decade when adjusted for inflation, according to the Environmen­tal Integrity Project. The not-forprofit is led by Eric Schaeffer, who was the head of the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s enforcemen­t office during the Clinton and George W Bush administra­tions.

The report also claimed that 34 of Texas’s nearly 80 petroleum refineries have been “in continuous noncomplia­nce” with pollution control laws over the last three years.

A TCEQ spokesman did not immediatel­y return requests for comment about the report. Speaking after the Port Neches explosions, Toby Baker, the agency’s executive director, criticized “an unacceptab­le trend of significan­t incidents” within the past year.

 ??  ?? A process tower flies through the air after exploding at a TPC group plant in Port Neches, Texas, on 27 November. Photograph: Erwin Seba/Reuters
A process tower flies through the air after exploding at a TPC group plant in Port Neches, Texas, on 27 November. Photograph: Erwin Seba/Reuters
 ??  ?? Locals look at smoke from a fire at a TPC Group chemical plant in Port Neches, Texas, on 27 November. Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck
Locals look at smoke from a fire at a TPC Group chemical plant in Port Neches, Texas, on 27 November. Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck

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