- Fragile Planet Offers a Nighttime Wildlife Experience
- Falcons Soccer Off & Running
- Cameron County Receives Funds to Improve Two Parks
- Falcons Complete First Half of 32-6A
- School District to Help out Victims of California Wildfires
- Sand Castle Days Continued Despite Unexpected Weather
- Ready for District
- Discussion of Garbage Dumpster Rates, Agreements Between State & City on Highway Regulations, and More
- 31st Annual Shrimp Cook-Off is Right Around the Corner
- LFHS Cross Country
Report: Chemical Plants Spewing Toxins Across Texas
- Updated: May 13, 2016

Chemical plants in Texas release tons of deadly toxins and carcinogens each year through breakdowns and maintenance errors, according to a new report. Photo: DanielAzocar/iStockphoto
by Mark Richardson
AUSTIN, Texas – Preventable breakdowns and maintenance errors are causing chemical plants across Texas to spew tons of toxic substances into the air each year, according to a new report.
The Environmental Integrity Project and Environment Texas report said that despite the release of deadly substances, state regulators are doing too little to address the problem. Luke Metzger, director of Environment Texas, said chemical plants released more than 68 million pounds of toxic substances last year.
“The pollution includes things like benzene, which is a known carcinogen,” he said, and “soot pollution, which can bypass your nose and throat and go deep into your lungs and bloodstream, causing heart attacks, lung disease, even premature death.”
Metzger said the groups compiled the “Breakdowns in Air Quality” study from incident reports filed with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, and believe the agency often is too lenient with polluters. TCEQ officials have called the report “untrue” and “misleading,” saying they act consistently within the state’s regulatory framework.
Metzger said the report lists the top 10 worst industrial polluters in Texas for each of five different pollutants. He said it also shows how the state’s major cities compare in terms of pollution caused by plant malfunctions.
“In most cases, these malfunctions and maintenance pollution are entirely preventable,” he said. “If the companies invested the money and took the time and made the effort, they could dramatically reduce the pollution.”
Metzger said the report contains a list of recommendations for solving the problem, but added that, in his experience, consistent enforcement of state and federal laws — with appropriate financial penalties — is the most effective way to rein in polluters.
The report is online at environmenttexas.org.