Valero begins work at Corpus Christi refinery-filing

June 20 (Reuters) – Valero Energy Corp began planned maintenance on Sunday in the east plant of its 315,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) Corpus Christi, Texas, refinery, according to a notice filed with Texas pollution regulators.

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The work is in Complex 7 of the refinery, according to the notice filed with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. (Reporting by Erwin Seba, editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Conoco reports flaring at Rodeo refinery -filing

June 13 (Reuters) – ConocoPhillps (COP.N) reported flaring at its 120,000 barrel per day (bpd) refinery in the San Francisco Bay-area town of Rodeo, California, on Saturday, according to a notice filed with California pollution regulators.

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The filing did not say which unit was involved in the flaring, but the refinery shut a unit involved in gasoline production on June 8. The flaring ended on Saturday, according to the notice. (Reporting by Erwin Seba)

Exxon reports L.A. refinery flaring-filing

June 13 (Reuters) – Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N) reported unplanned flaring at its 150,000 barrel per day (bpd) Los Angeles-area refinery in Torrance, California, on Saturday, according to a notice filed with California pollution regulators.

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The filing did not say what malfunction triggered the refinery’s safety flare system, which is used when production units are not functioning normally. (Reporting by Erwin Seba, editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Chevron reports Richmond refinery flaring -filing

May 30 (Reuters) – Chevron Corp (CVX.N) reported flaring on Sunday at its 245,271 barrel per day (bpd) refinery in the San Francisco Bay-area town of Richmond, California, according to a notice filed with California pollution regulators.

The notice did not say what unit or units were involved in the flaring.

Refineries activate their flare system when production units cannot process crude oil or other feedstocks normally. (Reporting by Erwin Seba; editing by Gunna Dickson)

Valero reports Corpus Christi isom unit repair -filing

May 30 (Reuters) – Valero Energy Corp (VLO.N) reported flaring at the west plant of its 315,000 barrel per day (bpd) Corpus Christi, Texas, refinery on Saturday due to unscheduled repairs on an isomerization unit, according to a notice filed with Texas pollution regulators.

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The flaring lasted for about a half an hour, according to the notice. (Reporting by Erwin Seba; editing by Gunna Dickson)

BP warns of L.A. refinery flaring -filing

May 30 (Reuters) – BP Plc (BP.L) (BP.N) warned of unplanned and planned flaring at its 265,000 barrel per day (bpd) Los Angeles-area refinery in Carson, California, as it works to restart a gasoline unit after it was shut for unscheduled repairs last week, according to notices filed with California pollution regulators on Saturday.

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One notice warned of unplanned flaring due to a breakdown on Saturday and Sunday. Another notice warned of planned flaring due to a breakdown from Sunday through Thursday. A third notice warned of planned flaring at the refinery through June 10.

BP is attempting to repair the gasoline-producing fluidic catalytic cracking unit at the Carson refinery and return the FCCU and ancillary units to planned operations, sources familiar with refinery operations have said.

The company has declined to discuss operations at the refinery. (Reporting by Erwin Seba; editing by Gunna Dickson)

Contaminated run-off from fire reaching wetlands

Contaminated water from a fire at a frozen food factory at Wingfield has been flowing into wetlands in northern Adelaide.

The fire at Rand Refrigerated Logistics is estimated to have left a damage bill of up to $10 million.

The company has moved to offices nearby and says frozen food supplies to supermarkets will not be disrupted despite the loss of stock.

Clive Jenkins from the Environment Protection Authority says water used to fight the blaze is now contaminated as it flows into the Barker wetlands.

“The quality of the water was mainly organic chemicals in nature, dairy products and plastic containers,” he said.

“The wetland is well and truly capable of assimilating those so there’s very little risk.”

The Metropolitan Fire Service says the blaze smouldered all weekend but is finally out.

Uttar Pradesh district launches afforestation drive

Kushinagar (Uttar Pradesh), May 14 (ANI): The Forest Department in Uttar Pradesh”s Kushinagar District has begun a drive to plant saplings on a large scale in a bid to prevent deforestation.

“Global warming is increasing, pollution is increasing, so, to stop these things to increase, we are motivating the forest department and even the common people to plant more and more trees,” said R P Singh, Divisional Forest Officer (DFO).

The forest department is motivating other organisations to spend one percent of their budget on tree plantation, as the district accounts for just two percent of the total forest cover in the state.

“We are planting saplings on the road sides, near the canals. We are putting our best effort to plant more saplings to increase the greenery,” said Mukhundu, a gardener.

The forest department is taking help from the non-governmental organisations in the plantation drive.

According to the State of Forest Report 2009, the country has only 21.02 percent of its geographical area under forest cover. This is targeted to grow to 33 percent by 2012. (ANI)

Britain’s biggest bra launched

London, May 3 (ANI): With the rise in number of big-breasted British girls, stores have come out with the biggest bra yet – a size KK cup.

The Bravissimo chain and Debenhams say they had to launch a KK as Brit girls are getting bustier, and it is bigger than the K-cup “windsock” launched by Selfridges department store in March.

Debenhams is ordering extra stocks as the 25 pounds bra, which has 20-inch wide cups, is going so fast.

“Many large sizes we sell regularly were unheard of a decade ago,” the Sun quoted spokeswoman Sharon Webb as saying.

Experts blame pollution or hormone changes.

“KK could soon be outdated,” Sun doctor Carol Cooper added. (ANI)

BP Texas City hydrotreater flares on upset-filing

HOUSTON, April 11 (Reuters) – A cat feed hydrotreater at BP Plc’s (BP.L) (BP.N) 455,790 barrel per day (bpd) Texas City, Texas, refinery was flaring on Friday due to a process upset, according to a notice filed with Texas pollution regulators.

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The upset triggered a release valve and the flaring, according to the notice filed with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality on Saturday. The refinery lowered system pressure until the release valve was reseated, according to the notice. (Reporting by Erwin Seba, editing by Maureen Bavdek)

ConocoPhillips shutting unit 20 for maintenance

(For refinery outages in the new Reuters Oil Fundamentals Database see here or go to )

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SINGAPORE, April 8 (Reuters) – ConocoPhillips (COP.N) will shut unit 20 at its 247,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) refinery in Sweeny, Texas, for maintenance, the company said in filing to state pollution regulators on Thursday.

The maintenance started on April 8 and will last until April 30, according to notices with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.

The filing did not specify the function of unit 20. The event involves flaring at a coker, it added.

“The maintenance activities include but are not limited to depressuring equipment to the flare, steaming, and taking the flare gas recovery system out of service for a brief period,” it said. (Reporting by Judy Hua; Editing by Ed Lane)

Valero to restart reformer at Corpus Christi refinery

(For refinery outages in the new Reuters Oil Fundamentals Database see here or go to )

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SINGAPORE, April 8 (Reuters) – Valero Energy Corp (VLO.N) will restart a steam methane reformer at its Corpus Christi, Texas, refinery on Thursday, according to a filing on with state pollution regulators.

The start-up will begin at 7:00 a.m. CDT and is expected to be completed 48 hours later on April 10, the filing said.

Last week, Valero said it expected no material impact to production from the unplanned work on the reformer in the west plant of the 315,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) refinery. (Reporting by Alejandro Barbajosa; Editing by Ed Lane)

ConocoPhillips shutting Unit 6 for maintenance

(For refinery outages in the new Reuters Oil Fundamentals Database see here or go to )

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SINGAPORE, April 8 (Reuters) – ConocoPhillips (COP.N) is shutting for maintenance Unit 6 at its 247,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) refinery in Sweeny, Texas for maintenance, it said in filing to state pollution regulators on Thursday.

The event involves flaring at a coker, and will last until April 9, it added.

“Beginning April 8, 2010, the refinery will shut down Unit 6 for a scheduled turnaround/maintenance event,” it said in the filing to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.

“The maintenance activities include but are not limited to depressuring equipment to the flare, steaming, and taking the flare gas recovery system out of service for a brief period.” (Reporting by Ramthanm Hussain; Editing by Michael Urquhart)

Approved power station emissions ‘underestimated’

The New South Wales Government has been criticised for approving a new power station in the face of an independent study showing that emissions were substantially underestimated.

Approval has been given for Delta Electricity to build a new base-load power station near an existing one at Mt Piper near Lithgow.

The proposal is for a 2,000 megawatt plant which would be fuelled by either natural gas or coal.

As part of the assessment process, the State Government commissioned the engineering company Arup to provide an independent review of Delta’s estimate of the plant’s greenhouse gas emissions.

Arup’s findings are published on the Planning Department’s website.

The report shows that emissions could be up to 20 per cent higher than Delta’s estimate.

The Greens MP John Kaye says it shows the plant’s approval should be put on hold.

“This should have been sent back to the drawing board,” he said.

“The NSW Government has based its approval of the Mt Piper power station on totally inaccurate information.

“Their own independent assessment says that it is two million tonnes of carbon dioxide shy of of the exact amount.”

Delta Electricity has denied that it underestimated the emission levels.

The power company has responded saying Arup’s modelling ‘significantly miscalculates’ the potential emissions because they assume the plant would operate 100 percent of the time.

Delta says in reality there would be planned and unplanned shutdowns.

Report shows rising mine sulfur emissions

Xstrata’s Mount Isa Mines says there has been more sulfur dioxide emitted in the past year due to shutdowns in its acid plant in the north-west Queensland region.

The Federal Government has released its National Pollutant Inventory Report, which has shown sulfur emissions at Mount Isa Mines have risen compared to previous years.

The report also shows the facility emits other pollutants like lead, zinc, copper, antimony and cadmium.

Xstrata chief operating officer Steve de Kruijff says the company is working to improve its environmental performance.

“There were some extended shutdowns last year which increased the amount of sulfur that was emitted,” he said.

“Xstrata Mount Isa Mines has a very significant operational footprint and it’s comparable to the sum of multiple individual mines and industrial processing sites all on one footprint, whereas lots of other operations only present their data in terms of one plant.”

Montara spill company ‘owes $2M’ to Territory companies

The Northern Territory Chamber of Commerce says the company responsible for the Montara Well oil spill in August last year owes an estimated $2 million to Northern Territory businesses.

Several Territory engineering and fabrication companies which did work for PTTEP Australasia before the spill, have told the Territory Chamber of Commerce they are owed a total of about $2 million by the company.

The Northern Territory Chamber of Commerce says the businesses supplied services to PTTEP Australasia in August, and they have not yet been paid.

The Chamber’s Chris Young said the debts might force job losses.

“Those companies are either going to find it very difficult to continue operating or if they are going to continue they are probably going to have cut costs in other ways,” Mr Young said.

“My major concern is that usually if a company finds itself in financial difficulties one of the first things it does is it lets go staff, either tradesman or if it has apprentices it will let go their apprentices, because that is one way they can save costs.”

The Chamber said the companies hoped to recoup their costs or negotiate payment plans.

Darwin-based company, Universal Engineering says it will be forced to lay off apprentices because of unpaid debts owed by PTTEP.

The company says it is owed several hundred thousand dollars for services provided to PTTEP prior to the spill.

Universal’s chief executive, Steve Tiley says almost 20 employees have been let go since the incident and more cuts may be required if PTTEP does not settle the debt.

“At the moment we have around about 16 apprentices on and if we continue to stagnate on these payments I’ve got to cut some costs somewhere,” Mr Tiley said.

“Unfortunately these apprentices will be handed back to the Australian Apprentices Commission and we will have to reassess it when we get back on our feet and get this payment finally sorted out.”

A spokesman for PTTEP says the company is currently in ongoing contractual and commercial discussions with Universal Engineering.

“Amounts have been paid by PTTEP to Universal Engineering in the past and PTTEP is working to resolve any valid outstanding amounts as quickly as possible,” the spokesman said.

In response to the comments from the Chamber of Commerce, the spokesman said PTTEP was “not aware of any outstanding accounts that are not being dealt with”.

“The Timor Sea incident was a massive operation involving more than 300 people offshore, and dozens of suppliers from the Northern Territory, interstate and overseas,” he said.

“So far the well kill and cleanup operation cost has been significant – a cost which PTTEP has agreed to pay.

“The scale of these operations means some payments to suppliers are currently being processed.

“Negotiations with suppliers are taking place on case by case basis.

“All valid accounts owing are being paid without delay. There is no issue with valid payments not being paid.”

FEATURE-Ecologists fear for Baikal as Putin saves factory

* PM Putin lauded and vilified for reopening pulp plant

* Ecologists say mill pollution threatens to kill Baikal

* Locals say plant saves jobs, gives hope

By Dmitry Solovyov

BAIKALSK, Russia, April 2 (Reuters) – On the shores of Lake Baikal, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is held up as a saviour and cursed as a scourge after allowing a Soviet-era paper mill to reopen beside the world’s largest freshwater lake.

Ecologists have branded Russia’s most powerful man as the killer of Baikal, a 25-million-year-old lake believed by local tribes to be sacred, and have mustered thousands of people at protests calling for his resignation.

Putin’s opponents say he has misjudged the public mood and is risking Baikal to save 1,470 jobs at the Baikalsk Pulp and Paper Mill, which was mothballed in late 2008 amid a pollution row.

Locals like Lyubov Kozyreva see it differently.

“Who told you the mill poisons the lake? These ‘greens’ and Putin critics are only trying to grandstand and score political points,” said the 70-year-old, who sells carrots and pickles in biting frost to supplement her modest pension.

She promised to pray for Putin, saying the former president had saved her town, some 5,000 km (3,100 miles) east of Moscow, from poverty and decay. The plant is currently testing equipment and is expected to resume production in the coming days.

Putin’s decision, hidden deep in the text of a government order published in January, is a stark example of the challenges Russia’s rulers face as they try to create jobs after the worst slump in 15 years.

Putin has taken control of efforts to deal with the economic crisis, crisscrossing Russia with orders to reopen ailing Soviet factories in towns like Baikalsk which depend on one employer.

Facing a barrage of criticism for his call on Baikal, Putin said in a speech last month that the issue had become too politicised.

“It should be studied without yelping, without making a lot of noise — thoroughly, seriously and with a responsible approach,” Putin said. “We closed this mill. And what was the result? Complete social and economic decline of the area.”

Opponents say Russia’s most popular politician, who in 2006 publicly redrew the route of an oil pipeline because of concerns about the threat to Baikal, is out of tune this time.

“Hundreds of incompetent decisions are made in the Kremlin and White House (government headquarters) … in precisely this ‘noiseless’ fashion without public discussion or criticism,” liberal politician Vladimir Ryzhkov wrote in The Moscow Times.

BAIKAL OR JOBS?

Environmentalists say the mill threatens the world’s deepest lake, which contains 20 percent of the world’s fresh water, and its 1,500 species of plants and animals, including a unique type of freshwater seal.

Environmental watchdog Greenpeace says before it was mothballed, the mill daily discharged some 120,000 cubic metres of waste water into the lake, containing high concentrations of toxic substances.

“Over the past decades the Baikalsk Pulp and Paper Mill has inflicted huge damage to the lake,” Greenpeace said in an appeal urging the closure of the plant.

Though some activists have been angered by the way Putin’s opponents have sought to use the issue to damage him, they say locals would do better to find jobs in industries that rely on Baikal retaining its pristine reputation — such as tourism.

“With one stroke of the pen, this chance has been missed,” said Andrei Petrov, a campaign coordinator at Greenpeace. “Yet again, people are now chained to this ill-famed plant which has fouled everything around it.”

Greenpeace has appealed to the Supreme Court to annul Putin’s order, though Petrov said Russian courts lack independence, decreasing the chances of a favorable outcome.

Lake Baikal is listed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site, and in 1996 Russia signed a convention obliging the government to do its best to preserve the treasure for future generations, Greenpeace said in an open letter to President Dmitry Medvedev.

“Lifting a ban on producing pulp, paper, water and cardboard … without a closed-cycle use of water … makes it possible to pollute Baikal with poisonous waste,” Greenpeace said.

It said the order contradicts federal law on protection of the lake and could project an image of Russia “as a state that deliberately violates its international commitments”.

A giant poster featuring a white Baikal seal cub and reading “Putin, do not kill me!” was hung on a sports hall in central Irkutsk one weekend last month when activists and locals held a protest against the opening of the plant.

“Putin signed a criminal order restarting the output of poisonous waste,” Boris Nemtsov, a leader of the Solidarity opposition movement, told the rally. “We must stop him. Those who are for Baikal must demand his resignation.”

Activists have held rallies across Russia to protest Putin’s decision. They plan more, although turnout has been modest.

The mill’s director, Konstantin Proshkin, told Reuters at the plant that environmentalists and Putin opponents had hijacked the issue and were ignoring the fate of Baikalsk’s residents.

“Baikalsk residents, our workers, have nowhere to go,” he said. “But these ‘greens’, I believe they attend those rallies to entertain themselves, to distract themselves from everyday boredom.”

“I just don’t get this old aggression against our mill.”

Russian tycoon Oleg Deripaska owns a 25.1 percent stake in the plant, which also runs the local town’s only heating plant. The state holds 49 percent.

In Baikalsk, a town of about 16,000 people snuggled between the shore and stunning mountains covered with pine forests, adoration for “saviour Putin” is interspersed with acrimonious remarks about his critics.

“When the plant closed, jobless men were starving, surviving mainly on their mothers’ pensions,” said Kozyreva, who worked as a crane operator at the mill for 32 years.

“Putin himself dived in the lake and saw nothing terrible on its bed,” she said, referring to Putin’s dive to the lakebed in a mini-submersible in 2008, when he declared Baikal to be clean. (Writing by Dmitry Solovyov; editing by Guy Faulconbridge, Steve Gutterman and Mark Trevelyan)

Miner fined $138K over creek pollution

A mining company in north-west Queensland has been fined $138,000 for causing environmental harm.

MMG Century Limited has pleaded guilty to two counts of unlawfully causing serious environmental harm.

It discharged contaminated waste water into Page Creek near Lawn Hill in the state’s north-west late last year during a flood.

The contamination spread for 18 kilometres, with MMG remediating three kilometres.

Today, magistrate Cathy Wadley fined MMG $138,000 as a deterrent.

She says it is necessary to send a clear message to other companies not to be lax with environmental management.

She said MMG was aware of failures of its water management system between 2004 and 2005 but chose to defer improvements.

The court heard the company had fully cooperated with the Department of Environment.

Valero says Texas City refinery upset, flaring -filing

HOUSTON, March 28 (Reuters) – Valero Energy Corp (VLO.N) eported flaring due to a vessel malfunction on Saturday in Complex 3 of its 245,000 barrel per day (bpd) Texas City, Texas, refinery, according to a notice filed with Texas pollution regulators.

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The flaring was expected to last at least 24 hours, according to the notice filed with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. (Reporting by Erwin Seba; Editing by Jan Paschal)

Valero says Texas City refinery upset, flaring -filing

HOUSTON, March 28 (Reuters) – Valero Energy Corp (VLO.N) eported flaring due to a vessel malfunction on Saturday in Complex 3 of its 245,000 barrel per day (bpd) Texas City, Texas, refinery, according to a notice filed with Texas pollution regulators.

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The flaring was expected to last at least 24 hours, according to the notice filed with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. (Reporting by Erwin Seba; Editing by Jan Paschal)