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OIL AND GAS
Chevron Phillips to spend $118 mn to upgrade Texas plants
by AFP Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 9, 2022

Chevron Phillips Chemical Company has agreed to spend $118 million to upgrade petrochemical plants in Texas that allegedly violate air pollution laws, the US Justice Department said Wednesday.

Chevron Phillips, which is jointly owned by Chevron Corp. and Phillips 66, has also agreed to pay a $3.4 million civil penalty, the department said in a statement.

Under the agreement, the company will upgrade petrochemical manufacturing facilities in Cedar Bayou, Port Arthur, and Sweeney to bring them into compliance with the Clean Air Act and state air pollution control laws, it said.

According to the complaint, the company "failed to properly operate and monitor its industrial flares, which resulted in excess emissions of harmful air pollution at the three Texas facilities."

The Justice Department said the pollution controls are estimated to reduce emissions of climate-change-causing greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, methane and ethane, by over 75,000 tons per year.

Well-operated flares combust harmful waste gases that would be released into the atmosphere, turning them into water and carbon dioxide.

The agreement is subject to court approval.


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OIL AND GAS
America is finally cleaning up its abandoned, leaking oil wells
Washington (AFP) March 6, 2022
Bill Suan bought his family's cattle farm in the mountains of West Virginia a decade-and-a-half ago with little thought for the two gas wells drilled on the property - but then they started leaking oil onto his fields and sickening his cows. After taking the operator to court, Suan was successful in plugging one well, but the company has since disappeared, leaving him to contend with a small-scale environmental disaster that's a symptom of the larger problem of orphaned oil wells across the United ... read more

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