After five days of the nation being captivated by dramatic images of flames and smoke plumes hovering above the Houston area from the Deer Park petrochemical fire, which had initially triggered an emergency shelter-in-place order from city authorities when it began last Sunday, firefighters had finally extinguished the raging inferno on Thursday.
But the Intercontinental Terminals Co. (ITC) chemical storage complex has again reignited late Friday afternoon, which once more sent a massive black cloud into the sky, reportedly visible from 20 miles away, and again potentially exposing residents to dangerous airborne chemicals as well as leaks into nearby waterways.
Harris Country officials now say multiple tank fires are once again raging uncontrolled, at two separate sections of the Houston area disaster site. Deer Park’s office of emergency management called the new smoke plume a “flare up” as part of “a developing incident.”
“The City of Deer Park is not issuing a Shelter-in-Place order at this time but we are monitoring the situation,” the emergency management official said.
Fire reignites at ITC in Deer Park. Plume of smoke beginning to form along highway 225 @KPRC2 officials say 2 tanks burning again. pic.twitter.com/ixEUUAKjrf
— KPRC2 Sally Mamdooh (@KPRC2Sally) March 22, 2019
Nearby schools had already been closed for days due to the original fire and parts of the Houston Ship Channel remained closed after a prior dangerous benzene leak at the plant due to the fire. Benzene is a known carcinogen which can cause devastating health effects based on various levels of exposure.
Residents have become increasingly anxious over what the Houston Chronicle describes as “volatile compounds sitting in damaged tanks at the petroleum storage facility or streaming into nearby waterways.”
Just when the nearly week-long emergency appeared to be under control, things could fast be getting worse again as containment crews are fighting back threats on multiple fronts, per Bloomberg:
The new blaze erupted just hours after a wall holding back almost a million gallons of toxic, flammable liquids collapsed, and just two days after the original conflagration was suppressed. Intercontinental Terminals Co., which owns the storage facility in suburban Deer Park, said the tank involved in the new blaze contained xylene, a toxic byproduct of the oil-refining process.
Area residents have told local media they’ve been extremely frustrated at ITC’s slowness at informing the public as to true extent and nature of the chemical leaks during their press conferences.
As of early Friday afternoon firefighters thought the blaze had been finally extinguished before it flared up again.
SKY2 flew over the ITC facility in Deer Park this morning and this afternoon — before and after a dike wall breach was reported. Here’s the comparison: https://t.co/hFKmadJXXf #kprc2 #hounews #deerpark #deerparkfire pic.twitter.com/2XsVAs59IR
— KPRC 2 Houston (@KPRC2) March 22, 2019
That anger was on display this week after ITC and city officials attempted to calm the public with messages of “everything is fine” as a blackened toxic cloud dominated the skyline for miles.
Everything is NOT fine: environmental groups sound the alarm on the obvious air quality implications of the ITC #DeerParkFire. #abc13 info: https://t.co/yvfCTlZrrr pic.twitter.com/XAij2V2jla
— Miya Shay (@ABC13Miya) March 18, 2019
ITC did confirm one of the first takes to catch fire had held 4.4 million gallons of pyrolysis gas, which is fuel blend containing benzene, xylene and toluene, and additional compounds.
Here’s a map of what unfolded today at the ITC facility. The tanks involved are unclear, but we’re basing that off SKY2 video. Read more: https://t.co/6bekupDcHn #kprc2 #hounews #deerpark #DeerParkFire pic.twitter.com/vrJvvpHfro
— KPRC 2 Houston (@KPRC2) March 22, 2019
According to prior local reports:
Officials said the components are in gas blend stocks used in the production of finished gasoline and base oil used for machine lubrication.
NAPHTHA can cause irritation to eyes and the respiratory system. It affects the central nervous system and is harmful and even fatal if it is swallowed.
XYLENE may also be fatal if it is swallowed and enters the airway. It can cause skin irritation.
City and environmental officials have throughout the ordeal assured residents that Harris County Pollution Control was conducing air quality monitoring tests of the area, but still cautioned residents to stay indoors throughout the ordeal if at all possible.
developing…
via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2YheZJi Tyler Durden