The Guardian (USA)

This ‘climate-friendly’ fuel comes with an astronomic­al cancer risk

- Sharon Lerner

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency recently gave a Chevron refinery the green light to create fuel from discarded plastics as part of a climatefri­endly initiative to boost alternativ­es to petroleum. But, according to agency records obtained by ProPublica and the Guardian, the production of one of the fuels could emit air pollution that is so toxic, one out of four people exposed to it over a lifetime could get cancer.

“That kind of risk is obscene,” said Linda Birnbaum, former head of the National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences. “You can’t let that get out.”

That risk is 250,000 times greater than the level usually considered acceptable by the EPA division that approves new chemicals. Chevron hasn’t started making this jet fuel yet, the EPA said. When the company does, the cancer burden will disproport­ionately fall on people who have low incomes and are Black because of the population that lives within three miles of the refinery in Pascagoula, Mississipp­i.

ProPublica and the Guardian asked Maria Doa, a scientist who worked at the EPA for 30 years, to review the document laying out the risk. Doa, who once ran the division that managed the risks posed by chemicals, was so alarmed by the cancer threat that she initially assumed it was a typographi­cal error. “EPA should not allow these risks in Pascagoula or anywhere,” said Doa, who now is the senior director of chemical policy at Environmen­tal Defense Fund.

In response to questions from ProPublica and the Guardian, an EPA spokespers­on wrote that the agency’s lifetime cancer risk calculatio­n is “a very conservati­ve estimate with ‘high uncertaint­y’”, meaning the government erred on the side of caution in calculatin­g such a high risk.

Under federal law, the EPA can’t approve new chemicals with serious health or environmen­tal risks unless it comes up with ways to minimize the dangers. And if the EPA is unsure, the law allows the agency to order lab testing that would clarify the potential health and environmen­tal harms. In the case of these new plastic-based fuels, the agency didn’t do either of those things. In approving the jet fuel, the EPA didn’t require any lab tests, air monitoring or controls that would reduce the release of the cancer-causing pollutants or people’s exposure to them.

In January 2022, the EPA announced the initiative to streamline the approval of petroleum alternativ­es in what a press release called “part of the Biden-Harris administra­tion’s actions to confront the climate crisis.” While the program cleared new fuels made from plants, it also signed off on fuels made from plastics even though they themselves are petroleum-based and contribute to the release of planetwarm­ing greenhouse gases.

Although there’s no mention of discarded plastics in the press release or on the EPA website’s descriptio­n of the program, an agency spokespers­on told ProPublica and the Guardian that it allows them because the initiative also covers fuels made from waste. The spokespers­on said that 16 of the 34 fuels the program approved so far are made from waste. She would not say how many of those are made from plastic and stated that such informatio­n was confidenti­al.

All of the waste-based fuels are the subject of consent orders, documents the EPA issues when it finds that new chemicals or mixtures may pose an “unreasonab­le risk” to human health or the environmen­t. The documents specify those risks and the agency’s instructio­ns for mitigating them.

But the agency won’t turn over these records or reveal informatio­n about the waste-based fuels, even their names and chemical structures. Without those basic details, it’s nearly impossible to determine which of the thousands of consent orders on the EPA website apply to this program. In keeping this informatio­n secret, the EPA cited a legal provision that allows companies to claim as confidenti­al any informatio­n that would give their competitor­s an advantage in the marketplac­e.

Neverthele­ss, ProPublica and the Guardian did obtain one consent order that covers a dozen Chevron fuels made from plastics that were reviewed under the program. Although the EPA had blacked out sections, including the chemicals’ names, that document showed that the fuels that Chevron plans to make at its Pascagoula refinery present serious health risks, including developmen­tal problems in children and cancer and harm to the nervous system, reproducti­ve system, liver, kidney, blood and spleen.

Aside from the chemical that carries a 25% lifetime risk of cancer from smoke-stack emissions, another of the Chevron fuels ushered in through the program is expected to cause 1.2 cancers in 10,000 people – also far higher than the agency allows for the general population. The EPA division that screens new chemicals typically limits cancer risk from a single air pollutant to one case of cancer in a million people. The agency also calculated that air pollution from one of the fuels is expected to cause 7.1 cancers in every 1,000 workers – more than 70 times the level EPA’s new chemicals division usually considers acceptable for workers.

In addition to the chemicals released through the creation of fuels from plastics, the people living near the Chevron refinery are exposed to an array of other cancer-causing pollutants, as ProPublica reported in 2021. In that series, which mapped excesscanc­er risk from lifetime exposure to air pollution across the US, the highest chance was one cancer in 53 people, in Port Arthur, Texas.

The one-in-four lifetime cancer risk from breathing the emissions from the Chevron jet fuel is higher even than the lifetime risk of lung cancer for current smokers.

In an email Chevron spokes person Ross Allen wrote: “It is incorrect to say there is a one-in-four cancer risk from smoke-stack emissions. I urge you avoid suggesting otherwise.” Asked to clarify what exactly was wrong, Allen wrote that Chevron disagrees with ProPublica and the Guardian’s “characteri­zation of language in the EPA consent order”. That document, signed by a Chevron manager at its refinery in Pascagoula, quantified the lifetime cancer risk from the inhalation of smoke-stack air as 2.5 cancers in 10 people, which can also be stated as one in four.

In a subsequent phone call, Allen said: “We do take care of our communitie­s, our workers, and the environmen­t. Generally, this is job one for Chevron.”

In a separate written statement, Chevron said it followed the EPA’s process under the Toxic Substances Control Act: “The TSCA process is an important first step to identify risks and if EPA identifies unreasonab­le risk, it can limit or prohibit manufactur­e, processing or distributi­on in commerce during applicable review period.”

The Chevron statement also said: “Other environmen­tal regulation­s and permitting processes govern air, water and handling hazardous materials. Regulation­s under the Clean Water, Clean Air and Resource Conservati­on and Recovery Acts also apply and protect the environmen­t and the health and safety of our communitie­s and workers.”

Similarly, the EPA said that other federal laws and requiremen­ts might reduce the risk posed by the pollution, including Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion’s regulation­s for worker protection, the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act and rules that apply to refineries.

But Osha has warned the public not to rely on its outdated chemical standards. The refinery rule calls for air monitoring only for one pollutant: benzene. The Clean Water Act does not address air pollution. And the new fuels are not regulated under the Clean Air Act, which applies to a specific list of pollutants. Nor can states monitor for the carcinogen­ic new fuels without knowing their names and chemical structures.

We asked Scott Throwe, an air pollution specialist who worked at the EPA for 30 years, how existing regulation­s could protect people in this instance. Now an independen­t environmen­tal consultant, Throwe said the existing testing and monitoring requiremen­ts for refineries couldn’t capture the pollution from these new plastic-based fuels because the rules were written before these chemicals existed. There is a chance that equipment designed to limit the release of other pollutants may incidental­ly capture some of the emissions from the new fuels, he said. But there’s no way to know whether that is happening.

Under federal law, companies have to apply to the EPA for permission to introduce new chemicals or mixtures. But manufactur­ers don’t have to supply any data showing their products are safe. So the EPA usually relies on studies of similar chemicals to anticipate health effects. In this case, the EPA used a mixture of chemicals made from crude oil to gauge the risks posed by the new plastic-based fuels. Chevron told the EPA the chemical components of its new fuel but didn’t give the precise proportion­s. So the EPA had to make some assumption­s, for instance that people absorb 100% of the pollution emitted.

Asked why it didn’t require tests to clarify the risks, a spokespers­on wrote that the “EPA does not believe these additional test results would change the risks identified nor the unreasonab­le risks finding”.

In her three decades at the EPA, Doa had never seen a chemical with that high a cancer risk that the agency al

lowed to be released into a community without restrictio­ns.

“The only requiremen­t seems to be just to use the chemicals as fuel and have the workers wear gloves,” she said.

While companies have made fuels from discarded plastics before, this EPA program gives them the same administra­tive break that renewable fuels receive: a dedicated EPA team that combines the usual six regulatory assessment­s into a single report.

The irony is that Congress created the Renewable Fuel Standard Program, which this initiative was meant to support, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and boost the production of renewable fuels. Truly renewable energy sources can be regenerate­d in a short period of time, such as plants or algae. While there is significan­t debate about whether ethanol, which is made from corn, and other plantbased renewable fuels are really better for the environmen­t than fossil fuels, there is no question that plastics are not renewable and that their production and conversion into fuel releases climate-harming pollution.

Under the EPA’s Renewable Fuel Standard, biobased fuels must meet specific criteria related to their biological origin as well as the amount they reduce greenhouse gas emissions compared with petroleum-based fuels. But under this new approach, fuels made from waste don’t have to meet those targets, the agency said.

In its written statement, Chevron said that “plastics are an essential part of modern life and plastic waste should not end up in unintended places in the environmen­t. We are taking steps to address plastic waste and support a circular economy in which post-use plastic is recycled, reused or repurposed.”

But environmen­talists say such claims are just greenwashi­ng.

Whatever you call it, the creation of fuel from plastic is in some ways worse for the climate than simply making it directly from fossil fuels. Over 99% of all plastic is derived from fossil fuels, including coal, oil and gas. To produce fuel from plastics, additional fossil fuels are used to generate the heat that converts them into petrochemi­cals that can be used as fuel.

“It adds an extra step,” said Veena Singla, a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “They have to burn a lot of stuff to power the process that transforms the plastic.”

Less than 6% of plastic is recycled in the US. Much of the rest – millions of tons of it– is dumped in the oceans each year, killing marine mammals and polluting the world. Plastic does not fully decompose; instead it eventually breaks down into tiny bits, some of which wind up inside our bodies. As the public’s awareness of the health and environmen­tal harm grows, the plastics industry has found itself under increasing pressure to find a use for the waste.

The idea of creating fuel from plastic offers the comforting sense that plastics are sustainabl­e. But the release of cancer-causing pollution is just one of several significan­t problems that have plagued attempts to convert discarded plastic into new things. One recent study by scientists from the Department of Energy found that the economic and environmen­tal costs of turning old plastic into new using a process called pyrolysis were 10 to 100 times higher than those of making new plastics from fossil fuels. The lead author said similar issues plague the use of this process to create fuels from plastics.

Chevron buys oil that another company extracts from discarded plastics through pyrolysis. Though the parts of the consent order that aren’t blacked out don’t mention that this oil came from waste plastics, a related EPA record makes this clear. The cancer risks come from the pollution emitted from Chevron’s smoke stacks when the company turns that oil into fuel.

The EPA attributed its decision to embark on the streamline­d program in part to its budget, which it says has been “essentiall­y flat for the last six years”. The EPA spokespers­on said that the agency “has been working to streamline its new chemicals work wherever possible”.

The New Chemicals Division, which houses the program, has been under particular pressure because updates to the chemicals law gave it additional responsibi­lities and faster timetables. That division of the agency is also the subject of an ongoing EPA Inspector General investigat­ion into whistleblo­wers’ allegation­s of corruption and industry influence over the chemical approval process.

This story was updated on 23 February 2023 to correct how much plastic ends up in the oceans each year. It is millions of tons, not hundreds of millions of tons.

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 ?? Photograph: Jonathan Bachman/Reuters ?? The Chevron refinery in Pascagoula, Mississipp­i. The cancer risk could fall disproport­ionately on low-income and Black people in the local community.
Photograph: Jonathan Bachman/Reuters The Chevron refinery in Pascagoula, Mississipp­i. The cancer risk could fall disproport­ionately on low-income and Black people in the local community.
 ?? Photograph: EPA ?? A redacted section of an EPA consent order covering plastic-derived fuels.
Photograph: EPA A redacted section of an EPA consent order covering plastic-derived fuels.

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