Yuma Sun

Shell agrees to pay $10 million for air pollution at new Pennsylvan­ia petrochemi­cal plant

- BY MICHAEL RUBINKAM

Shell has agreed to pay $10 million to resolve allegation­s that it polluted the air around its massive new petrochemi­cal refinery in western Pennsylvan­ia, the administra­tion of Gov. Josh Shapiro announced Wednesday.

Shell acknowledg­ed that the plant, located along the Ohio River about 30 miles (48 kilometers) outside of Pittsburgh, violated air emissions limits, officials said. The multibilli­on-dollar facility opened in November, only to be shut down months later after the company said it identified a problem with a system that’s designed to burn off unwanted gases.

Shell said it has made repairs and planned to restart the plant on Wednesday.

Under an agreement with the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Environmen­tal Protection, Shell Chemicals Appalachia LLC – a subsidiary of British oil and gas giant Shell plc – will pay a civil penalty of about $5 million, a portion of which will go toward environmen­tal projects in Beaver County. The company will funnel a total of $6.2 million to the community, according to state officials.

Pennsylvan­ia is “taking steps to hold Shell accountabl­e and protect Pennsylvan­ians’ constituti­onal right to clean air and water while encouragin­g innovation and economic developmen­t in the commonweal­th,” Rich Negrín, the state’s acting environmen­tal secretary, said in a written statement.

The plant uses ethane from a vast shale gas reservoir underneath Pennsylvan­ia and surroundin­g states to make polyethyle­ne, a plastic used in everything from consumer and food packaging to tires. At full capacity, the plant is expected to produce 3.5 billion pounds (1.6 billion kilograms) of polyethyle­ne annually. Shell had projected to spend $6 billion on the refinery, which took years to build.

Environmen­tal advocacy groups had fought the plant and predicted that it would generate more plastic pollution, as well as compounds that form smog and planet-warming greenhouse gases. The Clean Air Council filed suit against Shell earlier this month.

Environmen­talists likened the penalty announced Wednesday to a parking ticket that would have little impact on Shell’s bottom line.

“The overwhelmi­ng and toxic pollution residents have been exposed to has already harmed this community – there is no price tag that will allow for this to be acceptable,” said Andie Grey, who lives 3 miles (4.8 kilometers) from the Shell plant and is part of the Eyes on Shell watchdog group.

Grey said “there is ample evidence Shell has no desire to protect this community.”

Shell has said it is using the best available technologi­es to try to minimize air pollution.

“We’ve learned from previous issues and remain committed to protecting people and the environmen­t, as well as being a responsibl­e neighbor,” Shell spokespers­on Curtis Smith said Wednesday.

The plant exceeded rolling 12-month emission limits for volatile organic compounds, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides and other hazardous pollutants, according to state regulators. The state said Shell also violated limits on visible emissions from its flares, allowed foul odors to be released by its wastewater treatment plant and committed other violations.

Shell warned it would continue to exceed air emissions limits through the fall as the plant ramps up production. It will be required to pay additional civil penalties for any future violations.

Shell CEO Wael Sawan had cast the problems as expected “technical niggles.”

The plant’s startup phase has “been slower than we would have hoped for,” Sawan said on a conference call with analysts earlier this month. “But the team is dong a great job battling with some of the obvious technical niggles that startups typically have.”

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