EPA levies $2.45m fine on Sinclair
(PRNewswire-USNewswire) - Sinclair Oil Corp. will pay a $2.45 million civil penalty and spend more than $72 million for new and upgraded pollution controls to reduce air pollution from the company’s three refineries, the Justice Department and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced.
The settlement resolves alleged violations of the Clean Air Act at the company’s facilities in Casper and Sinclair, Wyo., and in Tulsa.
“The emissions reductions required by this settlement will lead to cleaner air and significant environmental and public health benefits for the communities in Wyoming and Oklahoma,” said Ronald J. Tenpas, assistant attorney general for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division. “The Department remains committed to working with EPA and states to bring industries such as the refining industry into compliance with the nation’s environmental laws.”
The agreement requires new pollution controls to be installed that will reduce annual emissions of nitrogen oxide by approximately 1,100 tons per year and sulfur dioxide by almost 4,600 tons per year when fully implemented. The new controls also will result in additional reductions of volatile organic compounds and particulate matter from each of the refineries. Volatile organic compounds and sulfur dioxide can contribute to respiratory disorders such as asthma and reduced lung capacity. They can also cause damage to ecosystems and reduce visibility. The three refineries covered by today’s settlement have the capacity to produce nearly 160,000 barrels of oil per day.
In addition, Sinclair will spend $150,000 on supplemental environmental projects in Oklahoma, including $100,000 to install new controls to reduce emissions of particulate matter from the City of Tulsa’s fleet of municipal trash trucks.
Last year, similar settlements were reached with Valero Energy, Total Petrochemicals and Hunt Refining Company, requiring approximately $300 million in new pollution controls at refineries located in Texas, Tennessee, Ohio, Alabama and Mississippi.
The states of Oklahoma and Wyoming have also joined in the consent decree and will share portions of the civil penalty with EPA.