Texas

Energy and Environment Reporting for Texas

Terrence Henry

Reporter

Terrence Henry reports on energy and the environment for StateImpact Texas. His radio, print and television work has appeared in the New York Times, The Washington Post, The Atlantic, NPR, The Texas Tribune, The History Channel and other outlets. He has previously worked at The Washington Post and The Atlantic. He earned a Bachelor’s Degree in International Relations from Brigham Young University.

The Drought Claims Another Victim: The A&M Student Bonfire

Photo by Darren Carroll/Getty Images

The University of Texas and Texas A&M football teams compete November 25, 2010 in Austin, Texas.

It was supposed to burn tonight, a stack of wood over thirty feet high, with an outhouse painted burnt orange on top. In a tradition dating back to 1909, Texas A&M University students and alumni gather together to light a massive bonfire before the annual rivalry football game with the University of Texas at Austin.

This year could well be the last meeting of the two teams, as A&M has left for another conference. And it could be the last bonfire for students, families and alumni at A&M wanting to ignite their passions against UT.

But nothing will burn this year. Continue Reading

A Sign of Pride for Brown Lawns

Good news for the many Texans living through the drought who are letting their grass die.

A new campaign by the Central Texas Water Efficiency Network (a group of water providers and conservation advocates) allows you to show off your dying grass as a model for conservation. Free signs are now available to residents to show their pride in a thirsty lawn:

The signs “provide a great explanation for why brown is the new “green” for Central Texas lawns during the drought,” says the group’s website. You can pick up your own at several locations in  Austin, San Marcos and Round Rock. More information is available on the group’s website.

Texas Sierra Club Responds to Departure of National Leader

Photo by Conservation History Association of Texas/Courtesy of Ken Kramer

Sierra Club Lone Star Chapter Director Ken Kramer

What did the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club have to say today about the news that the group’s national leader, Carl Pope, will be stepping down next year? Pope had drawn criticism from Sierra Club and others for reaching out to labor and industry.

The announcement that Pope is leaving shouldn’t have come as much of a surprise, as he had already turned over many of the reigns. Lone Star Sierra Club Director Ken Kramer says in an email to StateImpact Texas, “Michael Brune really took over as the staff leader of the organization when he replaced Carl as Executive Director last year.” Kramer says that Pope stayed on as Chairman — a role rarely used by the group — in order to help the new leader transition. “It was really always the plan for there to be this transition period in order to make the change a smooth one, which it has been,” he says. Continue Reading

Now Read This: Our Top 5 Stories from Last Week

  1. Five Things You Might Not Know About Water in Texas: There’s been a whole slew of reporting on the drought in Texas recently. What’s new here that you didn’t already know? Plenty.
  2. Who Uses the Most Water in Austin? We looked at data from Austin Water and discovered some customers use over a million gallons of water a year. Use our interactive map to see where the top 25 water users in Austin live, and how much water they use.
  3. When Hazardous Waste Lived Right Down the Street: What would it be like to grow up down the street — literally a block away — from a plant that treats hazardous waste? For the residents of the Dona Park neighborhood in Corpus Christi, this isn’t a hypothetical question.
  4. Ten Things You Should Know About the Texas Drought: It’s a question on everyone’s mind, one with an elusive answer — when will the drought end? How did we get here? Is there an end in sight? These and more questions, answered.
  5. If Austin Goes Coal-Free, Could the Rest of Texas Follow? The mayor of Austin announced his re-election last week, and with it a new pledge: running Austin free of coal-powered energy. What does this mean for the city and the state?

The Chairman of the Sierra Club is Bowing Out

David McNew/Getty Images

Sierra Club Chairman Carl Pope speaks before the U.S. Senate in 2008

The head of the Sierra Club, Carl Pope, is leaving next year, according to media reports. Pope had drawn criticism for reaching out to labor and industry.

The Los Angeles Times broke the story and has an interview with Pope:

Pope said he will leave his position as chairman to devote most of his time to “revitalizing the manufacturing sector” by working with organized labor and corporations. That emphasis caused schisms in the club, most notably when he hammered out a million-dollar deal with household chemical manufacturer Clorox to use the club’s emblem on a line of “green” products, and more recently with its support of utility-scale solar arrays in the Mojave Desert, the type of place the club made its reputation protecting.

“I’m a big-tent guy, ” Pope said in an interview in the group’s San Francisco headquarters. “We’re not going to save the world if we rely only on those who agree with the Sierra Club. There aren’t enough of them.” Continue Reading

Getting to the Bottom of the Leaks at BP’s Texas City Refinery

Mark Wilson/Getty Images

An oil refinery blow off stack in Texas City

There were reports earlier this week of leaks of at the BP refinery in Texas City, the site of a 2005 explosion that killed fifteen and injured 140 more.

The gases that were reportedly leaked were sulfur dioxide, a pollutant regulated by the EPA and linked to respiratory issues, and methyl mercaptan, a smelly gas — think rotten cabbage — added to natural gas (which is odorless) as a safety measure.

City Emergency Manager Responds

StateImpact Texas spoke with Texas City Emergency Manager and Homeland Security Director Bruce Clawson today about the situation at the plant. He says there has been no known leak of sulfur dioxide, but confirmed an ongoing leak of methyl mercaptan. Continue Reading

LCRA Responds to Austin Mayor’s Coal-Free Pledge

Photo by KUT News

The Fayette Coal Power Plant in La Grange

Earlier today StateImpact Texas reported on Austin mayor Lee Leffingwell’s new pledge to make Austin a coal-free city. To do so, the city would stop getting energy from the coal-powered Fayettte plant in La Grange.

This afternoon the Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA), which is a part-owner and operator of the plant, responded to the mayor’s vow to get Austin’s power from only non-coal sources.

The LCRA says that they are “proud” of the plant and that it is operated in an “environmentally responsible way.” They say they have “no plans to close [the plant] and will not support any plan to shut down the plant.” Continue Reading

If Austin Goes Coal-Free, Could the Rest of Texas Follow?

Photo by Raymond Thompson/KUT News

Austin Mayor Lee Leffingwell speaks at Steiner Ranch in September.

Austin’s Mayor Lee Leffingwell announced his bid for re-election yesterday, and while the announcement isn’t exactly surprising, one of his new campaign promises is: an Austin powered without any coal.

“Starting immediately, I’m going to begin a dialogue with the community, with Austin Energy, with the LCRA, and with state officials, about how to make Austin coal-free — and aggressively plan a date to achieve that goal,” the mayor said during his announcement yesterday at Becker elementary school, where he went to school as a kid. Continue Reading

When Hazardous Waste Lived Right Down the Street

Photo by Teresa Vieira/KUT News

The closed entrance to the former Encycle plant in Corpus Christi, Texas

What would it be like to grow up down the street — literally a block away — from a plant that treats hazardous waste? For the residents of the Dona Park neighborhood in Corpus Christi, this isn’t a hypothetical question. For fourteen years, the Encycle plant treated hazardous waste just 950 feet away from the neighborhood, which is also surrounded by six major refineries.

As you can see from the map below, the Encycle plant sits right at the edge of four long residential blocks, consisting of nearly three hundred homes. The plant is now being demolished, but families in Dona Park worry that as it’s being torn down, it could pollute the neighborhood again. Continue Reading

BP Responds to Reports of Leaks at Texas City Refinery

Dave Einsel/Getty Images

The BP Texas City Chemical Plant

This evening StateImpact Texas received a response from BP about reported leaks of sulfur dioxide and methyl mercaptan at their refinery in Texas City, Texas. The BP Texas City refinery is the third largest refinery in the US, according to the company, and refines three percent of the country’s gasoline.

Here is the full statement:

“BP Texas City continues to address an odor event that occurred Tuesday evening at its Texas City Refinery.

The source of the odor was mercaptan, the odor additive placed in natural gas, which is used because of its strong odor at very low concentrations.

The site dispatched and is maintaining mobile environmental monitors into the community.

Continue Reading

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