[BCNnet] RE: BP fined only $8,750, Times (July 21, 207)

Carolyn A. Marsh cmarshbird at prodigy.net
Sat Jul 21 08:55:42 CDT 2007


http://nwitimes.com/articles/2007/07/21/news/top_news/doc7f0f48fbe9e8a558862
5731e0081b739.txt

Date posted online: Saturday, July 21, 2007
BP fined $8,750 for waste water backup 
IDEM says Whiting plant quickly contained spill
BY PATRICK GUINANE
pguinane at nwitimes.com
317.637.9078 


 


 

INDIANAPOLIS | State environmental regulators fined BP $8,750 this spring
after a sump pump hose at the company's Whiting oil refinery malfunctioned
last year, dumping 1,000 gallons of untreated waste water onto soil within
the plant.

The Indiana Department of Environmental Management could have levied up to
$75,000 in daily penalties for the November hazardous waste spill. But an
IDEM spokeswoman said the agency took into consideration BP's efforts to
immediately notify the state and initiate cleanup procedures.

"There is a policy that looks at circumstances of the incident, and in this
case they were extremely cooperative and responsive and worked with us from
the very beginning to make sure that they were complying," IDEM spokeswoman
Amy Hartsock said Friday. 

The waste water overflowed from a sump unit near the refinery's filtration
plant Nov. 18. Hartsock said the waste water comes in contact with sludges
and solids produced as by-products of the refining process and could have
contained oil residue and heavy metals, including lead.

BP finalized a cleanup agreement with IDEM in April, and Hartsock said the
company soon will send the state samples showing whether all contamination
has been removed from soil near the sump unit. She said an IDEM inspection
last year concluded that none of the spilled waste water seeped outside the
plant or into Lake Michigan.

"We always work cooperatively with regulators, and we're pleased that we've
reached an agreement that ensures that the environment is protected," BP
spokesman Scott Dean said.

State records show BP deployed vacuum trucks to recover the spilled waste
water within hours of its release, and portions of the refinery were shut
down while the sump pump hose was repaired. BP was cited for three hazardous
waste violations, each of which carry a maximum fine of $25,000 per day.

Records indicate state officials had not cited the refinery for a similar
hazardous release since 2001.

BP faced a wave of public criticism this week after news reports detailed a
new state waste water permit allowing the Whiting plant to release 54
percent more ammonia and 35 percent more suspended solids into Lake
Michigan. Company officials say the higher discharges, which fall within
federal limits, are necessary as the refinery moves ahead with a $3.8
billion expansion to process heavier Canadian crude oil.

 

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