proliferation of new crude oil terminals health and community impacts
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Proliferation of New Crude Oil Terminals Health and Community impacts Bay Area Air Quality management District, December 4, 2013 Diane Bailey Natural Resources Defense Council * Note that most images here are taken from the internet with gratitude. Crude By Rail Projects: How many? How big?. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Proliferation of New Crude Oil Terminals Health and Community impactsBay Area Air Quality management District, December 4, 2013Diane BaileyNatural Resources Defense Council
* Note that most images here are taken from the internet with gratitude.
• 3 or more large projects. Potential to replace ¼ - ⅓ regional crude supply.
• Experts conclude that the projects are likely to bring in tar sands.
• Recent changes at some refineries to be tar sands ready.
• Result: Impacts to air quality, health, quality of life, safety and the environment.
Crude By Rail Projects: How many? How big?
• Increases in Air Pollution: Toxics like Benzene, Lead & Heavy Metals, and Smog and Soot
• More Noxious Odors• Increased Toxic Coke
Production• Higher Risk of
Accidents• Spills That Can
Damage the Environment
Crude By Rail: What are the implications of Tar Sands Dilbit?
A handful of Canadian oil sands. Source: Suncor / Inside climate news – A Primer on dilbithttp://insideclimatenews.org/news/20120626/dilbit-primer-diluted-bitumen-conventional-oil-tar-sands-Alberta-Kalamazoo-Keystone-XL-Enbridge?page=3
Mayflower, Arkansas
INCREASED AIR POLLUTION: THE DILBIT PROBLEM
· Called a Barbell crude, the light end including toxics like benzene quickly evaporates.
· That leaves the heavy end, loaded with toxic metals like lead.
Average Crude Unit Emissions at U.S. Refineries
Heavy Crude (API 22° or below)†
All Facilities (All crude levels)
All Facilities,Weighted by Capacity(All crude levels)
Arsenic1.83 0.54 0.43
Cadmium0.90 0.26 0.24
Chromium1.67 0.57 0.43
Lead2.75 0.78 0.52
Manganese1.99 0.56 0.47
Mercury0.060 0.035 0.029
Nickel22.9 10.7 10.9
Sulfur19,296 10,390 11,873
all units in ppmw† EIA defines Heavy Crude as “all crudes with an API gravity of 22° or below.” http://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/TblDefs/pet_pri_wco_tbldef2.asp data source: EPA Comprehensive Data Collected from the Petroleum Refining Sector http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/petref/petrefpg.html
4 x
5 x
Increases in Air Pollution: Health Impacts
• Dirty crudes have high levels of sulfur compounds with intense odors, like mercaptans.
• Mercaptans not only have an unpleasant odor, they are toxic.
• Mercaptans are also extremely flammable.
Bitumen from Christina Lake, CanadaSource: http://blogs.calgaryherald.com/2012/02/15/cenovus-rolls-out-christina-dilbit-blend-product/
More Noxious Odors
Marathon Refinery and Coke Piles in Detroit, James Fassinger guardian.co.uk, 7 June 2013
More Pet Coke
Alberta, Canada, October 2013
Lac Megantic, Quebec, July 2013
Higher Risk of Refinery & Rail Accidents
Chevron, Richmond, August 2012
Residential Proximity Puts Our Children at Risk
• Dozens of homes, schools, playgrounds, churches and parks are within a stones through of these projects.
• Historical industrial use of the site does not make it a good idea to re-use for high-risk oil terminal activities.
The very communities that this Air District already identifies as “Impacted” by Air Pollution & Vulnerability…
…would be most impacted by the planned new oil terminals and refinery projects.
Mayflower, Arkansas, April 2013
Is This What We Want in The Bay Area?
We Need the Air District to Protect the Public
Mayflower, Arkansas
• Put projects on hold until a thorough study of impacts is done
• Investigate the potential for increases in dirtier, lower quality crude oil
• Consider local context of projects – residential proximity, vulnerability, etc.
• Disclose information to the public
Priorities: Community Health
Allowing Bay Area sacrifice zones around oil terminals and refineries is not the price we should pay for oil independence.
Instead, we should declare fossil fuel independence.