Chevron appeals to state court to continue its retrofit project
By Katherine Tam West County Times
Posted: 07/20/2009 11:04:08 AM PDT
Updated: 07/20/2009 11:13:07 AM PDT
Related
Jul 19: Editorial: Chevron refinery project should proceed with better EIR Jul 15: Richmond, Chevron and environmentalists continue settlement discussions as workers leave refinery job site Jul 14: Chevron project tied to increased dependence on foreign oil Jul 9: Refinery construction halt costs city of Richmond Jul 7: Voros: Chevron refinery fight killing jobs Jul 2: Judge orders Chevron to stop work on Richmond refinery retrofit project Jul 1: Environmentalists want judge to stop construction at Chevron refinery in Richmond No offsite impacts from chemical leak at Richmond refinery, Chevron says
Chevron is appealing a court ruling that halted construction at its Richmond refinery in the hopes of getting the project back on track.
The oil company filed its appeal this morning in state court.
“We believe the city correctly approved the project and that its construction and operation should be allowed to proceed,” refinery manager Mike Coyle said.
More than 1,000 workers were laid off from the project over the past two weeks. One hundred workers remain to demobilize the construction site, as allowed under a court ruling last month by Contra Costa Superior Court Judge Barbara Zuniga.
Chevron secured permits last fall for its plan to replace its hydrogen plant, power plant and reformer to refine a wider range of crude that contains more sulfur. Company representatives said the project would make the refinery safer and more efficient.
But environmental groups said the upgrades would enable to refinery to process heavier crude that could increase pollution. The West County Toxics Coalition, Communities for a Better Environment and the Asian Pacific Environmental Network sued the city and Chevron in September, claiming the environmental impact report did not analyze all the impacts.
Zuniga sided with the environmental groups, ruling the environmental report is vague and must be clarified before construction can continue. She ordered project permits be set aside, effectively halting construction July 1.