Home Headlines 2 men killed after a leak at Deer Park oil refinery worked for a maintenance subcontractor

2 men killed after a leak at Deer Park oil refinery worked for a maintenance subcontractor

by Yucatan Times
0 comment

On Friday, October 11th, PEMEX issued an official statement saying that the two employees killed during a hydrogen sulfide leak at Deer Park, a Houston-area oil refinery were employees of a subcontractor performing maintenance work. Pemex is Mexico’s state-owned oil company that operates the plant in the U.S.

The two “were in the zone directly affected, and who received the direct impact of the gas,” Pemex Director Victor Rodriguez said during a news briefing in Mexico City. Both bodies have been recovered.

Mexican Energy Secretary Luz Elena Gonzalez said the leak has caused “no longer any risk” and that the cause of the leak is under investigation.

Pemex previously said in a statement that operations had been “proactively halted” at two units of the oil refinery to mitigate the impact.

Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez said the two workers were killed and nearly three dozen others were either transported to hospitals or treated at the scene following the leak of hydrogen sulfide Thursday at the facility in Deer Park.

No names have been released, and Gonzalez said the remains of the two dead workers were taken by the Harris County medical examiner.

Hydrogen sulfide is a foul-smelling gas that can be toxic at high levels. Gonzalez said that the gas release happened during work on a flange at the facility, which is part of a cluster of oil refineries and plants that makes Houston the nation’s petrochemical heartland.

Deer Park Mayor Jerry Mouton said city officials issued a shelter-in-place order but lifted it hours later after air monitoring showed no risk to the surrounding community.

“Other than the smell, we have not had any verifiable air monitoring to support that anything got outside the facility,” Mouton said.

The leak caused the second shelter-in-place order in Deer Park in a span of weeks. Last month, a four-day pipeline fire forced surrounding neighborhoods to evacuate.

TYT Newsroom

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept

Our Company

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consect etur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis.

Newsletter

Laest News