Local teen Summer Spencer created a film about how to shelter in place in case of an HF release at the Torrance Refinery. The film won her the “Girl Scout achiEver of the Gold Award” , and deserves to be seen. It highlights the dangers of HF and some of the history of local efforts to remove this hazard.
Join us on Saturday, February 17th from 10am until 1pm@ Columbia Park, Prairie Ave. (north of 190th St.) in Torrance, CA
Learn more about the dangers of Hydrofluoric Acid (HF/MHF) used at the Torrance & Wilmington refineries, hear from experts & elected officials, and rally for the safer community we all deserve! Join us in telling Valero Energy Corporation (based in Texas) & PBF Energy, Inc. (based in New Jersey) that communities deserve safer places to live, learn, and work!
While these private companies rake in hundreds of millions of dollars off of the South Bay, their investment into safer chemicals and safe practices remains lacking. Let’s make sure these two oil refining companies are protecting the safety of all children at nearby schools, of elderly people out for a walk, of our pets and wildlife, and for all! TRAA says, “OUR LIVES ARE WORTH THE COST TO CONVERT!”
For more information about the dangers of HF/MHF, a list of commercially-available alternatives to the deadly chemical, and the status of the fight for safer communities/working conditions, visit us at www.traa.website & join our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/TorranceRefineryActionAlliance
9 years ago, the Torrance Refinery narrowly missed a mass release of toxic HF/MHF. If the 40-ton piece of equipment had landed mere feet closer, the tank of Hydrofluoric Acid (aka HF/MHF) would have been damaged, leading to a potentially catastrophic, mass casualty event. People within a 5.3 mile radius of the refinery would have been put at risk for possible death or serious, irreversible damage to their health from the resulting deadly, ground-hugging gas cloud.
For years, people have rallied across the country for the refineries that use HF/MHF to convert to any of the safer, commercially-proven & available alternatives. Elected officials have attempted to pass legislation to require safer chemical usage at refineries. Government agencies have struggled to enforce safety measures.
WE NEED YOUR HELP MORE THAN EVER!
Join the fight for a safer community to live and work!
The South Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD) recently issued a notice about more unplanned flaring events at the Torrance Refinery, containing the following SCAQMD Link. That is already FIVE UNPLANNED events just this year!
According to the website, an Unplanned Event is used for emergencies caused by equipment failure, power outage, or other unanticipated event which requires the refinery to dispose of the gases in order to prevent harm to workers, the community, or to the environment.
So they have had 5 emergencies in the first 9 days of the year, compared to 13 during last year. The AQMD notice contained a link to a list of all the flaring events at the Torrance Refinery (Scroll down to Past Flare Events and click in the Event ID box to display newest first). It shows events for the last several years, which total by year:
2024
2023
2022
2021
Planned
1
7
12
7
Unplanned
5
13
24
5
And we are only 10 days into the year! Is anyone looking into this potential disaster? Does anyone care?
Join us on Saturday, February 17th from 10am until 11:30 am@ Columbia Park, Prairie Ave. (north of 190th St.) in Torrance, CAfor TRAA’s 9th anniversary of a near-release of deadly HF!
Join us on Saturday, February 17th from 10am until 1pm@ Columbia Park, Prairie Ave. (north of 190th St.) in Torrance, CA
Learn more about the dangers of Hydrofluoric Acid (HF/MHF) used at the Torrance & Wilmington refineries, hear from experts & elected officials, and rally for the safer community we all deserve! Join us in telling Valero Energy Corporation (based in Texas) & PBF Energy, Inc. (based in New Jersey) that communities deserve safer places to live, learn, and work!
While these private companies rake in hundreds of millions of dollars off of the South Bay, their investment into safer chemicals and safe practices remains lacking. Let’s make sure these two oil refining companies are protecting the safety of all children at nearby schools, of elderly people out for a walk, of our pets and wildlife, and for all! TRAA says, “OUR LIVES ARE WORTH THE COST TO CONVERT!”
For more information about the dangers of HF/MHF, a list of commercially-available alternatives to the deadly chemical, and the status of the fight for safer communities/working conditions, visit us at www.traa.website & join our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/TorranceRefineryActionAlliance
9 years ago, the Torrance Refinery narrowly missed a mass release of toxic HF/MHF. If the 40-ton piece of equipment had landed mere feet closer, the tank of Hydrofluoric Acid (aka HF/MHF) would have been damaged, leading to a potentially catastrophic, mass casualty event. People within a 5.3 mile radius of the refinery would have been put at risk for possible death or serious, irreversible damage to their health from the resulting deadly, ground-hugging gas cloud.
For years, people have rallied across the country for the refineries that use HF/MHF to convert to any of the safer, commercially-proven & available alternatives. Elected officials have attempted to pass legislation to require safer chemical usage at refineries. Government agencies have struggled to enforce safety measures.
WE NEED YOUR HELP MORE THAN EVER!
Join the fight for a safer community to live and work!
Refineries that use hydrofluoric acid in making high-octane gasoline are at the center of a high-stakes fight over costs, safety and federal regulations designed to prevent chemical disasters.
By: Sean Reilly Reporter E&E News/POLITICO Ph: 202-316-4596 Twitter:@SeanatGreenwire
GREENWIRE | When an explosion shook an oil refinery in the Southern California city of Torrance in early 2015, two workers were injured, debris went flying and dust settled as far as a mile away.
But the outcome could have been horrifically worse, federal investigators with the Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board later concluded. One of the debris fragments landed near a tank containing tens of thousands of pounds of modified hydrofluoric acid, a pollutant that can be deadly at low concentrations. Had the tank been hit and ruptured, the result would have been a “potentially catastrophic” release into the neighborhoods surrounding the plant, the inquiry found.
The refinery, now owned by PBF Energy, is one of about 45 around that country that use hydrofluoric acid — also known as hydrogen fluoride and abbreviated HF — in making high-octane gasoline. Now the possible perils have emerged as a major fault line in the jockeying over the final shape of an EPA plan to tighten “accidental release” regulations on refineries and myriad other industrial operations around the United States that use or store dangerous chemicals.
The White House office is winding up a review of the final version of the rule. EPA plans to publish it early this year, agency spokesperson Remmington Belford said in a recent email.
The draft rule released in 2022 would require refineries reliant on hydrofluoric acid to analyze whether “safer technologies and alternatives” exist.
In the view of industry critics, mishaps of all types remain distressingly common. “These things happen to us here on a very regular basis and by some of the same facilities over and over again,” said Jennifer Hadayia, executive director of Air Alliance Houston, an environmental group, in an interview.
But while some community advocates want EPA to further toughen the final version, the analysis requirement alone has already fueled industry objections.
“The proposal is unwarranted, prohibitively expensive, and will not improve safety,” the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers, a refiners trade group, told EPA and the White House regulations office in October, according to a slide presentation posted on a government website.
The rule, dubbed “Safer Communities by Chemical Accident Prevention,” would cover almost 12,000 operations — also including facilities as diverse as wastewater treatment plants and farm supply distributorships — that must file risk management plans spelling out how they strive to prevent accidental releases and deal with them once they occur.
Among a raft of other provisions in the 2022 draft, plant operators would have to share chemical hazard information with people living within 6 miles of their facilities and account for the effects of climate change in assessing the odds of an accident.
If those provisions have also spurred opposition, the polemics over the planned refinery requirement have been especially heated, with the ever-sensitive topic of gasoline pump prices lurking in the background.
Hydrofluoric acid is among almost 190 contaminants deemed hazardous under the Clean Air Act. It can easily penetrate the skin and then damage cells, with effects that include swelling and fluid buildup in the lungs, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Levels as low as 30 parts per million are “lethal,” EPA said in the proposed rule.
But many refineries employ hydrofluoric acid to make alkylate, a chemical blend that’s part of the recipe for high-octane gasoline, often billed as improving car engine performance. Of 129 refineries, about one-third depend on the compound, according to the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers, which says that it has been safely used since World War II, with few releases and no “off-site fatalities.”
EPA “is attempting to put up a barrier to HF alkylation, and by extension U.S. fuel production,” Geoff Moody, the group’s senior vice president of government relations, said in a statement, adding that there would be “devastating consequences” for “affordable domestic energy” if a significant amount of production capacity is lost. While some refineries instead use sulfuric acid, conversion can cost up to $800 million per unit, according to the group.
EPA’s view is more nuanced, with findings that the price tag would range from $35 million to $900 million, based on a particular refinery’s production levels. The practicality “of these potentially safer alternatives is situation-specific,” with owners and operators “usually in the best position to make these determinations,” the agency said in the draft rule.
It’s not the only front on which EPA is stepping up pressure on refiners that use hydrofluoric acid. In an updated roster of national priorities last summer, the agency’s enforcement staff signaled plans to more closely monitor those plants. Recent releases and concerns about the “potentially catastrophic consequences” support “a focus on these facilities using these hazardous chemicals in their processes,” according to the roster.
But worries about the compound’s role in gasoline production are not new.
“The potential impact of a large-scale HF release in a heavily populated area is so great that it may be impossible for any refiner or community to be fully prepared,” the United Steelworkers union reported in 2013.
“The science clearly says this stuff has got to go,” Steve Goldsmith, president of the Torrance Refinery Action Alliance, formed after the 2015 accident, said in an interview.
The alliance is among more than a dozen organizations that have met with EPA and White House officials while the final rule has been under review.
On top of the safer alternatives analysis proposed by EPA, Goldsmith urged the agency to require individual refineries to convert within three years if that analysis in fact shows there are less dangerous options, according to a script of his remarks he provided to E&E News.
About 20 mostly Democratic attorneys general from New York, Iowa and other states are urging EPA to require a “more comprehensive and robust evaluation of alternatives to hydrofluoric acid alkylation.”
Triggering the February 2015 blast at the Torrance refinery was a buildup of hydrocarbons in a pollution control device, the Chemical Safety Board found.
One of the resulting pieces of debris hit scaffolding in the plant’s alkylation unit, narrowly missing the tank laden with modified hydrofluoric acid, according to the probe.
More than 300,000 people live within 3 miles of the plant; had the tank ruptured, many residents could have died or been seriously injured by a low-lying cloud of the pollutant, the board said in a news release.
At the time of the explosion, the Torrance plant was owned by Exxon Mobil, which sold it to New Jersey-based PBF the next year. A PBF spokesperson did not reply to a phone message or query submitted through an online contact page. But the refinery’s website features an industry consultant’s warning that an HF ban won’t reduce risk but “will threaten fuel supplies.”
EPA’s 2022 proposal marked the latest round in a politicized struggle that now spans three presidential administrations.
In 2017, EPA under outgoing President Barack Obama tightened accidental release regulations after an explosion four years earlier at a West, Texas, fertilizer storage and distribution facility killed 15 people and leveled much of the surrounding area.
But in 2019, with the backing of industry groups and Republican state officeholders, the Trump administration largely scrapped those stricter standards on the grounds that they were costly and unneeded.
Air Alliance Houston and a dozen other groups in 2020 challenged the rollback in court. Proceedings in the litigation have since been on hold as EPA reconstructs and — in some ways — expands on the Obama-era blueprint.
The White House regulations office, Hadayia said, “needs to stop dragging its feet because we can’t wait anymore in Houston for an improved rule.”
On Tuesday, TRAA representatives will make a presentation to the federal Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to advocate for a strong EPA rule governing the use of HF in refineries across the US. Over the last several years numerous experts have publicly called for a conversion away from this most dangerous chemical wherever feasible. For instance Christine Todd Whitman and other national security experts said in their Letter from National Security Experts “For decades, our country has failed to squarely address the dangers of hazardous chemical facilities ― from oil refineries to water treatment plants. An accident, natural disaster, or deliberate attack could trigger an explosion or chemical release that could kill thousands of people. Millions of our citizens live and work near these dangerous facilities.”
The South Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD) recently issued a notice about another unplanned flaring event at the Torrance Refinery, containing the following SCAQMD Link. According to the website, an Unplanned Event is used for emergencies caused by equipment failure, power outage, or other unanticipated event which requires the refinery to dispose of the gases in order to prevent harm to workers, the community, or to the environment
The AQMD notice contained a link to a list of all the flaring events at the Torrance Refinery (Scroll down to Past Flare Events and click in the Event ID box to display newest first). They show that, so far this year, there have been 6 Planned and 12 Unplanned events. That means that there averages more than one emergency every month at this refinery!
With a safety record like this, how can we feel safe living so near, when they use massive quantities of the deadly hydrogen fluoride (HF)? There were 5 small HF releases between 2017 and 2019. The AQMD has not revealed how many HF releases have occur in the last 3 years. Why not?
Washington D.C. August 31, 2023 – Today, the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board (CSB) applauded the updated National Enforcement and Compliance Initiatives (NECIs) recently issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that will continue EPA’s focus on “Reducing Risks of Accidental Releases at Industrial and Chemical Facilities” and, importantly, for the first time emphasize inspecting and addressing noncompliance at facilities that use highly toxic hydrogen fluoride (HF).
While not specifically calling for a conversion to a safer alternative, the CSB does ask for much stronger oversight and controls. (See the full News Release).
According to CNN from Oct 1st: At least five people were killed and parts of an Illinois neighborhood were evacuated due to a Friday crash involving a semi-truck carrying thousands of gallons of anhydrous ammonia.
The truck was carrying about 7,500 gallons of the toxic substance at the time of the wreck in Effingham County, according to the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. The agency said early estimates say more than half of that – about 4,000 gallons – were released. … Parts of Teutopolis, a village in south-central Illinois, were evacuated “due to the plume from the ammonia leak” after the crash Friday night on US Highway 40, about a half mile east of Teutopolis, Illinois State Police said..
Anhydrous ammonia is the one gas rated as almost as hazardous as HF. But think of the tanker trucks delivering HF to our local refineries. In this area, approximately 12 tanker trucks per mo. each deliver about 36k lb. of modified hydrofluoric acid (MHF) from Louisiana to the Torrance and Valero Wilmington refineries. That is almost 3 quarters of the main holding tank at the refinery!
And if there was a HF release, the resulting vapor cloud could reach many miles in any downwind direction. For example, in 2021 an HF tanker overturned in China, killing one and releasing an unknown amount of HF. Fortunately it was in a rural area.
Tanker trucks are involved in accidents more often than we realize. Overall, in 2017 there were 452 large truck accidents where the cargo was released. Remember, the danger from MHF is just as great outside the refinery as inside. In the volumes it is stored, it should NOT be used if there is ANY alternative. And we know there are numerous viable commercially-available alternatives.
Residents in parts of St. John Parish were forced to evacuate their homes Friday morning after a pillar of fire erupted from a storage tank the Marathon Petroleum refinery in Garyville.
In yet another near miss at an HF-using refinery, a fire caused an evacuation order for two miles around the Marathon Refinery in Mississippi. Here are reports from L’Observateur newspaper, and WBRZ.
Officials were responding to what they described as a naphtha release and a fire at one of the refinery’s storage facilities. Naphtha is a flammable liquid hydrocarbon mixture commonly used as a solvent in soaps or varnishes.
St. John Parish President Jaclyn Hotard declared an emergency and ordered the evacuation of a two-mile radius around the fire. That order was lifted around 2:20 p.m. Friday.