Chemical Emergency Spurs 'Take Cover' Warning In La Porte, Texas

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2017A chemical leak emergency is prompting orders for La Porte and Shoreacres, Texas residents to take cover and turn off their air conditioning and heating systems. This, as the Lone Star State deals with the emergency needs of the victims of Hurricane Harvey. The shelter in place order covers areas around State Highways 146 and 225. Deer Park is not affected by the order, according to KTRK. "Close all doors and windows and turn off heating or cooling systems," an emergency La Porte city notice said. "Stay off the phone so you can receive updates from Emergency Officials."
 
Arkema: No way to prevent explosion at flooded Texas chemical plant


  • All residents within 1.5 miles of a chemical plant in southeast Texas were evacuated on Tuesday because of the rising risk of an explosion.
  • The evacuation was taken as a "precautionary measure."
  • The owner of the plant, Arkema, said in a statement the situation at its Crosby, Texas, plant "has become serious" and evacuated all of its staff from the facility.
 
What plant? A friend worked at Celanese (Monsanto).
Lost his hair, and. his boots would disolve every 2-3 weeks.


The water of the coast of La Porte/Shoreacres looks like
a cesspool.

Maybe Philthydelphia is cleaner at least?

You got a desk job as top TNB reporter. Doing something meaningful.
 
The Arkema organic peroxide plant in Crosby, Tx. I'm hearing they're now having fires and explosions there. That shouldn't happen if they followed normal safety procedures. But it sounds like they left the product in the packout tanks that are inside the buildings. If the product warms up and decomposes there, the buildings will fill with highly flammable vapors that will auto-ignite and explode.

But what do they know about safety procedures? The Froggies got rid of all their experienced safety people, even though they manufacture a highly dangerous product.
 
Upper management knows this Bobster.
(As do you)
The Chemical industry plants are old an its likely
the froggies are getting the nod to crash them, albeit
too stupid to see it or care.
Pasadena is unreal. It was crap 40 years ago.
Brown and Root (Halliburton) has big holdings there
so........
 
I used to stay in the Holiday Inn in Baytown. I'll bet that town is really flooded right now.

B & R does the maintenance on the plant. They really ripped us when they built the newest unit. Lots of supplemental AR's that really ran up the cost overruns. We actually gave them a bonus for finishing on time ... when they didn't.

Upper management really screwed the pooch when they tried to move our engineering department to HQ in the middle of the project and had to hire B&R because none of the guys wanted to move to Philly.

I suspect Les Froggies will collect the insurance on everything that burned and rebuild in China.
 
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I used to stay in the Holiday Inn in Baytown. I'll bet that town is really flooded right now.

B & R does the maintenance on the plant. They really ripped us when they built the newest unit. Lot's of supplemental AR's that really ran up the cost overruns. We actually gave them a bonus for finishing on time ... when they didn't.

Upper management really screwed the pooch when they tried to move our engineering department to HQ in the middle of the project and had to hire B&R because none of the guys wanted to move to Philly.

I suspect Les Froggies will collect the insurance on everything that burned and rebuild in China.

I worked a grunt B+R job (service) to Shell. The shell plant looked like crap
the rusty pipes we were steam blasting , looked spent. That was 35 yrs ago.
I prefer not to think of Baytown in any other way than having at least had a bath.
Sorry you had to do time their. I feel better knowing someone else escaped.

BTW I lived in Hitchcock, on the water when the grain elevators in Galveston
blew up. One D. Azz lighting a cigarette =
Enormous pieces of concrete landed in streets near it.
Shook my waterside house on stilts like a toy rattle.
Then there's Pasadena. :barf4:
Then there's Seabrook . The Vietnamese fishermen were in the news with the
KKK .
The friend who lost his hair at Celanese father and brother were Knights of..
 
Many dusts are highly explosive. When we built a unit for handling a solid product, we had to send it out for dust explosion testing to size the vents on the unit. If a chemical can oxidize, its dust can explode.
 
Published on Aug 31, 2017 Chemicals have been released into the atmosphere from a flood-damaged plant near the storm-hit US city of Houston, local officials say. Earlier, black smoke was seen issuing from the Arkema chemical plant at Crosby. A police officer who was helping secure the site was taken to hospital after inhaling fumes, while nine others admitted themselves as a precaution. Arkema said this was believed to have been caused by a "non-toxic irritant". Harris County sheriff Ed Gonzales said the release was not believed to have been a result of an explosion, despite earlier reports of blasts. Residents living within a 1.5-mile (2.4km) radius of the plant were evacuated after the company warned there was a risk of explosions and fire. During heavy rainfall from Hurricane Harvey, the complex lost the ability to refrigerate chemical compounds that need to be kept cool.
 
The root? An AA hire mulatto with three VP positions.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/explosions-smoke-reported-at-chemical-plant-outside-houston/

Fire breaks out at Harvey-hit chemical plant after small explosions
Last Updated Aug 31, 2017 11:21 AM EDT

BARRETT, Texas -- A fire broke out at an Arkema chemical plant in Crosby that lost power early Thursday after Harvey engulfed the area in extensive floods, police said. The plant's operator had earlier said the facility was rocked by two explosions, but police later described the incident as a "series of pops."

Officials said at a press conference Thursday morning that the Harris County Emergency Operations Center received reports of two explosions and black smoke coming from the plant at about 2 a.m.

Assistant Harris County Fire Chief Bob Royall described the explosions as "container ruptures." He said different grades of organic peroxides in a semi-trailer caught fire not long after midnight. The fire emitted a 30- to 40-foot flames and black smoke. Royall says officials expect similar reactions in the eight remaining trailers.

Arkema executive Richard Rennard told CBS News correspondent David Begnaud that the organic peroxides stored in the containers combust when not refrigerated.

"The concern is that when these things degrade, they generate heat. When they generate heat, they can burn. When they burn, they burn aggressively. You can have an explosion," Rennard said. "We wanted to remove people from any potential hazard or risk for a potential explosion."

Rennard said he was confident the 1.5-mile evacuation zone around the plant was large enough to keep residents safe. He said the company was monitoring the remaining eight containers at the plant but couldn't say for sure whether Arkema would be able to anticipate future explosions.

Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez says some deputies suffered irritated eyes from the smoke but insisted it wasn't dangerous.

"It is not anything toxic," Gonzalez said. "It is not anything that we feel is a danger to the community at all."

At a separate news conference in Washington, D.C., FEMA administrator Brock Long told reporters that "by all means, the plume is incredibly dangerous."

A spokeswoman for the plant said late Wednesday that the flooded facility had lost power and backup generators due to the flooding, leaving it without refrigeration for chemicals that become volatile as the temperature rises. The plant is about 25 miles northeast of Houston.

"The fire will happen. It will resemble a gasoline fire. It will be explosive and intense in nature," spokeswoman Janet Smith told The Associated Press late Wednesday.

There was "no way to prevent" an explosion, chief executive Rich Rowe said earlier Wednesday.

Gonzalez said the fire would burn itself out. Royall said the fire service was not monitoring the fire -- "that's industry's responsibility" -- and that the company hired a contractor to do aerial monitoring of the smoke to see which direction it was going.

Arkema manufactures organic peroxides, a family of compounds used for making a variety of products including pharmaceuticals and construction materials.

"As the temperature rises, the natural state of these materials will decompose. A white smoke will result, and that will catch fire," Smith said. "So the fire is imminent. The question is when."

Harvey struck Southeast Texas last week, slamming into the coast as a Category 4 hurricane, then weakening to a tropical storm that dumped record amounts of rain on the state, in particular the Houston area. The storm was downgraded to a tropical depression late Wednesday.

The company shut down the Crosby site before Harvey made landfall last week, but a crew of 11 had stayed behind. That group was removed and residents living within a 1.5-mile radius were told to evacuate Tuesday after the plant lost power.

Harris County Fire Marshal spokeswoman Rachel Moreno said late Wednesday that the 1.5-mile radius was developed in consultation with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and other subject-matter experts.

"The facility is surrounded by water right now so we don't anticipate the fire going anywhere," Moreno said.

The plant falls along a stretch near Houston that features one of the largest concentrations of refineries, pipelines and chemical plants in the country.

Arkema was required to develop and submit a risk management plan to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, because it has large amounts of sulfur dioxide, a toxic chemical, and methylpropene, a flammable gas. The plans are supposed to detail the effects of a potential release, evaluate worst-case scenarios and explain a company's response.

In its most recently available submission from 2014, Arkema said potentially 1.1 million residents could be impacted over a distance of 23 miles in a worse case scenario, according to information compiled by a nonprofit group and posted on a website hosted by the Houston Chronicle.

But, Arkema added, it was using "multiple layers of preventative and mitigation measures" at the plant, including steps to reduce the amount of substances released, and that made the worst case "very unlikely."

Daryl Roberts, the company's vice president of manufacturing, technology and regulatory services in the Americas, did not dispute that worst-case scenario but said that assumed all the controls in place failed and strong winds blew directly toward Houston, the nation's fourth-largest city.

"We have not modeled this exact scenario but we are very comfortable with this 1.5-mile radius," Roberts told the AP. He added that it mostly resembled less serious scenarios that would affect a half-mile radius and a few dozen people.

Roberts said the vessels containing the organic peroxide are equipped with controls to slow the release of chemicals. He said the chemicals will quickly vaporize because of the water, reducing the size and scope of the fire.
 
When were you in Houston?
It was a disgusting mess 35 years. I remember thinking
'Why are we cleaning this old crap?'. (Replace it!)
That was at Shell.
I saw no mud managing anything. That must have come later.

BTW: Two close friends ended up in wheelchairs working for Brown and Root.
One caught a spinal infection from the group latrine, that left him paralyzed.
The other fell, broke his back. Went on to get his law degree. Then drank himself
to death.
 
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