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Energy and Environment Reporting for Texas

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Where Are Toxic Emissions Coming From?

Background

Poisoned Places is a special investigative report by NPR, the Center for Public Integrity (CPI) and StateImpact examining how air pollution is affecting communities across the nation. It has been 31 years since Congress passed the Clean Air Act, which directs the Environmental Protection Agency to enforcer regulations and protect the general public from toxic emissions. But as the investigative series discovered, companies are still producing toxic emissions, and regulators are having a difficult time stopping them. The team found:

  • State and federal regulators take months and sometimes years to enforce anti-pollution rules. About 400 facilities are on an internal EPA watch list that includes serious or chronic Clean Air Act violators that have not been subject to timely enforcement. The list was obtained by the Center and NPR and is being made public for the first time.
  • More than 1,600 facilities around the country are classified by the EPA as “high priority violators” of the Clear Air Act sites in need of urgent action by enforcers. Nearly 300 have had this designation for at least a decade.
  • Regulators largely rely on an honor system easily manipulated by polluters, which report their own emissions. Even judging by the self-reported numbers, the scale of pollution is enormous: At least 600 million pounds of toxic chemicals – including arsenic, benzene, formaldehyde and lead – were released into the air in 2009, according to EPA data.

Latest Posts

EPA’s ‘Watch List,’ By the Numbers

The Center for Public Integrity’s iwatch News has put together a “by the numbers” look at toxic air emissions. The data comes from a once-secret EPA ‘watch list’ that shows repeated violators of environmental laws in the country, with many of them in Texas. StateImpact Texas, NPR and the Center for Public Integrity reported on the list and people […]

A Whistle-Blower’s Report on Hazardous Waste in Corpus Christi

Last week StateImpact Texas reported on a former hazardous waste plant that sits at the edge of a residential neighborhood in Corpus Christi. The Encycle facility, which opened as a hazardous waste plant in 1989, was ultimately shut down for pollution violations. Encycle and its parent company ASARCO filed for bankruptcy after agreeing to $1.7 […]

EPA Makes Secret ‘Watch List’ Public

Earlier this month, StateImpact Texas, NPR and the Center for Public Integrity reported on a secret EPA ‘watch list’ that shows repeated violations of environmental laws in the country by industry. The list showed that even though many facilities throughout the country were violating the law, the EPA and state agencies weren’t enforcing those laws […]

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

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 […]

BP Responds to Reports of Leaks at Texas City Refinery

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 […]

A Child of Refinery Row Looks Back

What’s it like growing up surrounded by refineries in Corpus Christi? A commenter on one of our stories about Refinery Row, Iris Gonzales Hinojosa, writes about her childhood among the refinery stacks: “I grew up in Dona park, specifically on Vernon Drive, and many of my childhood memories include Mom and Dad, closing our home’s windows to […]

Texas Stands Out on Polluter List

NPR reporters, working with the Center for Public Integrity, obtained a never-before published EPA list the Agency uses to track polluters. Roughly one in 10 factories on the most recent list is in Texas.

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