Oil and gas refineries and chemical plants are scattered across the Texas Gulf Coast, the nation’s petrochemical corridor. These structures are a big source of revenue for industry companies, but they have also been a source of danger, chronic health problems, and constant worry for the people who live near them.
A woman in Port Arthur told the Associated Press that she has developed respiratory problems since moving to the area in 2017, and blames the emissions for her son’s asthma flare-ups. Another woman says the polluted air is responsible for the asthma-related pneumonia that killed her son at 27 and for giving her and her 4-year-old granddaughter asthma.
It is mostly African Americans and Latinos who live close to the refineries and chemical plants, and those groups also seem to be affected by emissions of pollutants the most. In 2017, a study found that black children in Houston had asthma at almost twice the frequency as white children.
Activist Hilton Kelley recalls growing up in the area, “always hearing about someone dying of cancer, always smelling smells, watching babies using nebulizers.”
Federal regulations have been in place to restrict pollutants and other health threats and require companies in the industry to monitor hazardous emissions. Still, the Trump administration has actively tried to weaken them.
“Under President Donald Trump, federal regulatory changes are slashing requirements on industry to monitor, report and reduce toxic pollutants, heavy metals and climate-damaging fossil fuel emissions, and to work transparently with communities to prevent plant disasters — such as the half-dozen major chemical fires and explosions that have killed workers and disrupted life along the Texas Gulf Coast over the past year alone,” the AP article noted.
Those explosions include an explosion and fire at Intercontinental Terminals Co.’s Deer Park facility in March 2019 that billowed black smoke into the air for days. In July 2019, there was an explosion at an ExxonMobil plant in Baytown. And in November 2019, there were two explosions and a fire at the Port Neches chemical plant in Houston.
These and other fires and explosions in the area sent petrochemicals, such as xylene and benzene, into the air. Both are known carcinogens, and residents reported feeling nauseous during the incidents.
The most recent assessment from the EPA, released in 2014, found residents of predominantly minority Houston neighborhoods faced at least three times the cancer risks of Americans overall.
These incidents and concerns do not seem to have altered the Trump Administration’s approach. On March 26th, the Environmental Protection Agency announced a temporary waiver of enforcement of legally mandated public health and environmental protections during the coronavirus pandemic. It is unclear how long that is to remain in effect.
Community activists have led their neighborhoods, setting up air monitors to measure refinery and plant emissions.
“We have to defend ourselves,” Juan Flores of Manchester told the AP. “Because the federal government isn’t going to do it.”
You must talk to a lawyer to protect your rights if you or a loved one was injured due to a fire, explosion, or leak from an oil or gas refinery or chemical plant. The Texas attorneys at Tracey Fox King & Walters have the experience and industry knowledge you need to pursue legal action. Contact us to schedule a free consultation.