Valero refinery fined nearly $200,000 over Suisun Bay spill
The Valero oil refinery in Benicia is facing nearly $200,000 in potential fines for spilling more than a million gallons of partially treated wastewater into Suisun Bay and Carquinez Strait, including excessive concentrations of selenium and cyanide, state regulators said Tuesday.
A worker at the plant failed to open a valve on Jan. 18, causing 1.13 million gallons of industrial sludge to flow into the bay over a seven-hour period, according to a civil complaint filed by the San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board.
The board combined all of the alleged violations and issued a fine of $197,500, which Valero can appeal during a Jan. 17 hearing unless the company waives that right, said Thomas Mumley, the assistant executive officer for the water quality control board.
The refinery, which processes as much as 165,000 barrels of crude oil a day, corrected the problem by installing a turbidity meter and alarm, according to regulators.
The spill was the latest problem at Valero, which in 2013 was named by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency one of California’s top emitters of dangerous chemicals and pollutants into the air, water or ground.