Showing posts with label spill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spill. Show all posts

Saturday, October 13, 2012

HazMat crews cleaning up hydrochloric acid spill in Stafford

Sky Eye HD was over a Hazmat scene in Stafford, where hydrochloric acid spilled out of the bay of an auto repair shop Sky Eye HD was over a Hazmat scene in Stafford, where hydrochloric acid spilled out of the bay of an auto repair shop

  A HazMat scene is unfolding in Stafford right now.

We're told hydrochloric acid spilled at the Pit Stop Auto Repair shop near FM 1092 and Mula. The acid spilled out of the bay and onto the pavement outside.

Right now, HazMat crews are spraying down that pavement.

We don't have word of any injuries, but will continue to follow the story. Stay with Eyewitness News and abc13.com for the very latest.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) Get more Local »


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Friday, May 25, 2012

Chemical spill closes mile-long portion of Tidwell in northeast Houston for hours

See it on TV? Check here.  HOUSTON (KTRK) -- A chemical spill closed about a mile-long portion of Tidwell in northeast Houston for hours on Thursday.

The eastbound lanes of Tidwell Rd. between the Eastex Freeway and Lockwood were shut down due to a chemical spill.

According to the Houston Fire Department, it appeared to be some type of used oil product from a tanker truck. HFD responded to the report of a chemical spill in the 4100 block of Tidwell about 2:20pm Thursday.

HFD says hazardous material crews and Public Works and Engineering were on scene to assist with the clean-up, and the road is now back open.

Check real-time traffic information in our ABC13.com traffic section

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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Friday, May 4, 2012

Katy engineer charged in BP spill goes to court

See it on TV? Check here.   HOUSTON (KTRK) -- An engineer from Katy is expected in court today to answer charges that he deleted sensitive text messages during the BP spill.

Kurt Mix is scheduled for arraignment in New Orleans. Mix is charged with two counts of obstruction of justice and was freed on $100,000 bail.

He is the first person to face criminal charges in the Deepwater Horizon accident which killed 11 people and sent almost five million barrels of oil into the Gulf.

(Copyright ©2012 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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Friday, December 23, 2011

Highway 290 inbound lanes at Telge Rd. reopen after fuel spill

See it on TV? Check here.   HOUSTON (KTRK) -- Highway 290 has reopened Thursday afternoon after a fuel spill shut down all inbound lanes in northwest Harris County.

All westbound lanes of 290 at Telge Rd. had been closed since a little before 11am Thursday while crews worked to clean up the spill. Only the shoulder was getting by.

Motorists were being diverted to the feeder road at Telge and traffic was backed up to Jones Rd.

Check real-time traffic information in our ABC13.com traffic section

(Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
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Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Scientists study dolphins to assess oil spill damage

This week marks the one year anniversary of the deadly explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil platform.

Eleven workers were killed in that explosion, which sparked the largest oil spill in American history.

While the oil didn't seem to have as big of an impact as originally feared, some researchers say it is still affecting the wildlife in the Gulf of Mexico.


Scientists working for the federal government still don't know how much damage the BP spill caused, meaning they don't know how much BP will be fined.


There's practically no visible oil anymore on the Gulf or in marshes, but there are signs that it was there.


Among them, nearly 400 dead dolphins washed up on Gulf shorelines.


Last summer, Louisiana's Barataria Bay was one of the busiest spots on the Gulf. Hundreds of BP's cleanup boats made the bay busier than I-10 at rush hour.


These days, there really isn't anything to block scientist Suzanne Lane's view. She's tracking and photographing bottlenosed dolphins in this bay for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.


"[I take] kind of like a dolphin census, and then see how the population does throughout the year," Lane explained.


It's all part of a huge effort to figure out just how much damage was caused by BP's record-setting oil spill.


"Dolphins are top-level predators in the estuaries. Looking at them tells you something about how the ecosystem is doing," said Lori Schwacke with NOAA. "What we see in the dolphins is an indicator of what we see in the food web."


The size and health of the population of dolphins that are alive will tell scientists a great deal, but as we near this one year anniversary, they're concerned about the abnormally large number of dolphins that have died.


"We want to know -- A, number one -- why these dolphins are dying. But we also want to know how these dolphins are dying," said Blair Mase, NOAA marine mammal stranding coordinator. "It's such a complex situation because we've never really dealt with anything like this before."


Officials say 375 dead dolphins have washed up on Gulf coast beaches since last February -- six times above average.


At least 12 of the dead dolphins washed up with visible oil on their bodies. The most recent washed up just two weeks ago.


The die-off started before the Deepwater Horizon accident, but spiked dramatically right after the spill and increased again this year.


Scientists want to know what effect the oil is having.


Even more troubling is that many of the dead dolphins were either stillborn or died shortly after birth.


"It is unusual to see that many dolphins -- likely pre-term, aborted fetuses -- washing ashore," Mase said.


Dolphins are pregnant for 12 months, meaning any who died since the spill likely swam through oil & dispersant-filled water at some point while pregnant.


Out on the water a year after the blowout, Deepwater oil may not be visible, but scientists want to know just how much trouble it's still causing dolphins.


"Dolphins can avoid oil; however, the magnitude of this event, you know, it was covering estuaries and bays, and this is their habitat. There was nowhere for them to go," Mase said.


NOAA is testing the blubber of every dolphin that watches ashore. That should tell them what the dolphins died of and how much oil was ingested by the animals.


Bcause that evidence may be needed in court against BP one day, the government won't share any of those results yet.

(Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) 

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Friday, April 15, 2011

Acid spill prompts evacuation in West University

 SkyEye HD was over the acid spill in West University Thursday morning.

  WEST UNIVERSITY, TX (KTRK) -- Residents who live near a pool in West University were evacuated from their homes this morning because of an acid spill.

According to West U. police, muriatic acid, which is used in pool maintenance, spilled at the pool at 4130 Byron Street at Colonial Park shortly after 8am. By 10am, they decided to evacuate homes within a one-block radius as a precaution.

At this point, it's not clear how many residents were affected.

(Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)


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