Disaster Explosion causes massive fire at troubled Martinez refinery - California sure likes to catch fire these days

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Explosion causes massive fire at troubled Martinez refinery
The Mercury News (archive.ph)
By Rick Hurd, Chase Hunter, and Jose Carlos Fajardo
2025-02-02 02:57:23GMT

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A large column of smoke and flames are seen coming from the Martinez Refining Company property in Martinez, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 1, 2025. County officials warned that the incident could cause problems for people with respiratory issues. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) full size

MARTINEZ — A leak led to an explosion and massive fire at a refinery with a history of issues Saturday, prompting a shelter-in-place order handed down some three hours after the blaze began.

All of the company’s employees on site were accounted for; at a news conference around 5:20 p.m. — as warning sirens continued to sound in the background — Contra Costa County Fire Protection District Battalion Chief Bob Atlas said that three personnel had unspecified minor injuries.

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Atlas said that the fire was “burning ferociously,” with an unknown amount of fuel remaining and declined to provide an estimate on when the fire would be put out.

Authorities said that a leak of hydrocarbons ignited the fire. There was not more information available Saturday evening about the cause of the leak or the type of fuel burning.

“Any smoke that burns, any combustible element, is going to be toxic at some point,” Atlas said at the news conference. “We’re trying to ascertain right now what exactly is in that stream of smoke.”

Crews rushed to the Martinez Refining Company at 3495 Pacheco Blvd. after the first call about 1:47 p.m., Atlas said. Fire Prevention Capt. Ted Leach said crews had difficulty locating the precise source of the flames when they got to the refinery.

Asked about the trouble pinpointing the blaze, Atlas said it was “not anything more than would normally be involved in industrial firefighting. There’s a lot of heavy steel in there, there’s a lot of materials that are in there, so getting to the scene of the fire takes a little bit of time.”

Flames were shooting some 200 feet into the air and giant black clouds were moving east with the wind, according to witnesses. Employees from the refinery were evacuated and could be seen gathered on Pacheco Boulevard, near the facility.

At around 5 p.m., the Contra Costa Health Services department issued a Level 3 alert, a shelter-in-place for portions of Martinez north and east of the refinery. The shelter-in-place ran from the area near Mountain View Drive to the areas near Vine Hill Road and Avon Way and toward the Benicia Bridge.

Public defense sirens went off in the area about the time the shelter-in-place alert went out.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHtVDh0S64A (archive.ph)(PreserveTube)(720p catbox.moe archive.org)

Authorities closed Shell Avenue to all traffic. The Marina Vista Avenue on- and off-ramps to and from Interstate 680 were closed in both directions, but the freeway remained open.

Chevron Fire crews were at the scene. Coast Guard units also responded in the Carquinez Strait, about 3 miles from the refinery.

A county alert sent around 2 p.m. warned of a “public health advisory” for the incident and suggested that “individuals with respiratory sensitivities” would be most affected.

In an alert initially sent out via the county’s emergency system around 2 p.m., the company reported the incident as a Level 2 notification — which include a hazardous materials release or potential release that is expected to have off-site consequences and possibly adverse health consequences. Children and elderly individuals were advised to go inside.

“Most people will not be affected,” the advisory read. “Eye, skin, nose or throat irritation may be possible for some people in the affected area. If people experience any irritation, advise them to go inside and rinse any irritated area of their body with water.”

The MRC facility has faced a number of issues in the last year, including several incidents of unplanned flaring, an accidental release of coke dust, and an agreement to settle a legal dispute with county officials by using a continuous monitoring system to ensure their compliance with air-quality standards.

“Our biggest priority right now for this incident is the protection of the citizens and the first responders that are on scene,” Martinez Refinery PIO Brandon Matson said.

Check back for updates on this developing story.

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Flames shoot into the air from an explosion reported at the Martinez Refinery in Martinez, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 1, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) full size
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Flames shoot into the air from an explosion reported at the Martinez Refinery in Martinez, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 1, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) full size
fire05.jpg
Flames shoot into the air from an explosion reported at the Martinez Refinery in Martinez, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 1, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) full size
fire06.jpg
Flames shoot into the air from an explosion reported at the Martinez Refinery in Martinez, Calif., on Saturday, Feb. 1, 2025. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group) full size
 
أَشْهَدُ أَنْ لَا إِلَٰهَ إِلَّا ٱللَّٰهُ وَأَشْهَدُ أَنَّ مُحَمَّدًا رَسُولُ ٱللَّٰهِ
 
Sweet new USCSB content inbound. Too bad the turnaround is forever with them.
 
It won't be long before conspiracy theories about that explosion will pop up on the web if it didn't already.
 
Martinez refinery workers return to work after gas-leak explosion and fire
The Mercury News (archive.ph)
By Chase Hunter and Rick Hurd
2025-02-04 00:54:58GMT
About 300 workers have returned to Martinez Refining Company after a leak ignited an explosion and subsequent fire Saturday afternoon, leading to a shelter-in-place order for neighboring communities.

As Contra Costa County Fire and Martinez Refining Company investigators sift through the damage, refinery workers have returned to their posts in an attempt to prevent further incidents, following numerous health advisories from Contra Costa Health Services department in recent days.

“I think some of the residents don’t understand that our workers are in there doing their best to prevent any further injuries and impacts to the surrounding community,” United Steelworkers Local 5 President Nick Plurkowski told Bay Area News Group.

Employees were forced to evacuate Saturday afternoon when an explosion shot flames hundreds of feet into the air. Four refinery workers received minor injuries during the incident and were transported to local hospitals, according to Martinez Refining Company Public Information Officer Brandon Matson.

Billowing, jet-black smoke over residential neighborhoods in Martinez, Pacheco and Clyde led to a shelter-in-place order Saturday evening from the Contra Costa Health Services department. The department lifted the shelter-in-place order around 9 p.m. Saturday night, but maintained a Level 2 public health advisory calling for sensitive populations to stay indoors.

The fire was mostly put out by 11 a.m. on Sunday, allowing refinery personnel to return to work in a limited capacity at designated safe areas of the refinery. Plurkowski said workers have been in the refinery since evacuations were lifted and are doing everything in their power to keep the affected communities and the refinery safe.

“It’s an oversimplification when I say this, but we’re scrambling around and seeing what we can do that’s still safe to do,” Plurkowski said. “The whole refinery is intertwined, and all the units affect the other units, so there’s stuff still going on.”

Gas prices ticked up slightly Monday, but one expert predicted a more significant spike due to the potential loss of the Martinez facility’s operations, which represent some 10 percent of the state’s refining capacity.

Martinez Refining Company will be required to launch a Root Cause Analysis to identify how the incident happened. Additionally, the refinery will be ordered to create and implement mitigation strategies to prevent future incidents, according to CCH.

When asked for an update on the incident and investigation, company spokesperson Matson told Bay Area News Group, “We will continue to provide updates on our social media and have nothing further to add at this time.”

Saturday’s incident adds a new chapter to the history of incidents at Martinez Refining Company in the past five years where hazardous materials were released to the public. On Nov. 24 and 25, 2022, the refinery accidentally released a powdery substance known as a “spent catalyst” that contained higher levels of heavy metals than normal. The Contra Costa County district attorney pursued legal action against Martinez Refining Company at the time for not notifying County health officials when the accident happened.

On July 11, 2023, the refinery unintentionally released petroleum coke dust, a byproduct of refining crude oil, for about one minute. The investigation that followed did not find soil contamination in the affected communities.

Neither of the incidents resulted in injuries.

Other refineries in the area have been plagued by problems, as well, including intermittent flaring reported Sunday at the Chevron Refinery in Richmond. In 2024, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District announced a $5 million penalty against Marathon Martinez Refinery for 59 air-quality violations from 2018 to 2022 — the second-largest fine the agency had ever assessed.

The repeated public health incidents at Martinez Refining Company and other refineries in the East Bay have exhausted the patience of many local residents, including a Martinez woman who asked to be identified as a “quite irritated resident.”

“By now, we’ve gotten used to this,” she said.
 
The US hasn’t build a ground up new refinery since the 70s.

This will become increasingly common as these facilities age.
 
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