Eric Holthaus is a great writer on climate matters
Hurricane Harvey aims for the Texas fracking boom’s favorite port
25 August, 2017
Forecasters expect Hurricane Harvey to make landfall late today as a major hurricane — the first to hit the United States since 2005. That’s scary enough.
But
even more troubling: It’s on target to strike a part of the Texas
coast where the recent growth of the oil and gas industry has
increased the risk of catastrophic storm damage.
The
Lonestar state hasn’t seen a storm like Harvey in
decades.
Drawing energy from the
abnormally warm Gulf of Mexico waters,
its winds are expected to reach 125 miles per hour before landfall.
Wide swaths of Texas and Louisiana could seeas
much as 35 inches of rainfall — a
year’s worth in
just three or four days.
If
that forecast pans out, Harvey could go down as one of the worst
hurricanes in U.S. history. “In all these years, it’s rare that
I’ve seen a hurricane threat that concerns me as much as this one
does,” said meteorologist Rick Knabb, former director of the
National Hurricane Center, in a
televised statement.
Part
of that concern is driven by where the storm is expected to make
landfall. Corpus Christi, a critical port for the Texas oil and gas
industry, is also one
of the most vulnerable places in America when
it comes to coastal flooding. An
analysisearlier
this year by the South Texas Economic Development Center predicted
that 92 square miles of the Corpus Christi metro area would flood
with a six-foot rise in water, including all six of the city’s
refineries.
Harvey
could bring up to twice that, with as much as 12
feet of storm surgepotentially
swamping refinery
infrastructure,
including huge tanks of crude oil, with saltwater.
As
the New York Times reported
last month,
Corpus Christi’s industrial growth has been driven by plentiful oil
flowing in from West Texas, one of the centers of the last decade’s
fracking-fueled oil and gas boom. Corpus Christi is now America’s
fourth-largest port by tonnage. In just the last year, oil exports
there are up five-fold.
That
growth has also been driven by a significant policy change made under
the Obama administration. In a compromise with congressional
Republicans, President Obama agreed in 2015 to lift
a ban on oil exports to
most countries, allowing the United States to ship crude oil
worldwide for the first time since the 1970s. In return, Congress
approved renewable energy tax credits.
The
Trump administration has loudly
championed the
ensuing oil export boom and America’s imminent shift to becoming a
net exporter of oil and gas products.
The
Corpus Christi port has just embarked on a $1 billion expansion
project to grow further. Problem is, most of that
infrastructure sits
just a few feet above sea level.
About
one-third of U.S. refining capacity lies
in the path of Harvey,
and operators are starting
to shutter operations in
advance of the storm. Any sustained outages could cause a
temporary nationwide
surge in
gasoline prices. Patrick DeHaan, an oil industry analyst, told Grist
that catastrophic flooding could prevent refiners from getting back
online quickly.
As
Emily Atkin writes
in the New Republic,
the pollution consequences of the storm could be immense. Harvey’s
floodwaters could seep into massiveunderground
gasoline storage facilities,
potentially dislodging and floating the tanks.
Above
ground, the port also has the capacity to store up to 3.2
million barrels of crude oil,
infrastructure which could buckle and leak during the storm.
Bloomberg reported that several refineries are filling
their tanks with
as much oil as possible before the storm hits to try to help weigh
them down.
“The
storm as a whole is tracking towards some of the most critical
refinery regions in the country,” says John Homenuk, a
meteorologist whose work focuses on the energy industry. “With feet
— not inches — of water moving towards these regions both from
rainfall and surge, the potential for dangerous impacts is rising.”
But
Harvey threatens far more than just the oil industry. After landfall
near Corpus Christi, the storm is expected to loop back out to sea,
re-strengthen, and make a second landfall early next week somewhere
between Houston and New Orleans. That scenario could mean four
full days of
hurricane conditions, a near-worst
case scenario for
the Gulf Coast, possibly requiring
the evacuation of
large parts of the Texas coastline and maybe even New Orleans, which
is currentlywithout
a fully functional drainage pump system.
The
combination of Harvey’s strong winds and heavy rain could uproot
trees and knock out power and air conditioning for days in steamy
Texas communities as far inland as San Antonio and Austin. One
projection showed
as many as 3.4 million people might lose power, including
approximately half of the Houston metro area — a city
that’s particularly
flood prone.
More
than 1.5 million people have moved to the Texas coast in the last 20
years, making it one of the fastest-growing regions of the country.
People
that live here, whether they want to admit it or not, are largely out
of practice when it comes to storms like Harvey. As we learned during
the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, a city that evacuates, then
floods, is never quite the same again.
For
the latest on Hurricane Harvey, follow @EricHolthaus on
Twitter.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.