Texas City Refinery Essays

  • BP- Texas City Oil Refinery Explosion (2005) – Case Summary

    1594 Words  | 4 Pages

    the explosion, BP’s stock price and its reputation went down, and it is one of the numerous results of the disaster. It has definitely happened because of a lack of strong ethical guidance. BP- Texas City Oil Refinery Explosion (2005) – Case Summary In one of the largest oil refineries in Texas City, on March 23, 2005, the explosion and fire took place, which took away 15 lives, injured over 170 people, and obligated thousands residents that lived close to the plant to stay in their homes. BP

  • Ethical Concerns Regarding the BP Texas City Oil Refinery Explosion

    4263 Words  | 9 Pages

    Public Website, 2010) “The Texas City Refinery is BP’s largest and most complex oil refinery... It was owned and operated by Amoco prior to the merger of BP and Amoco.” (Michael P. Broadribb, 2006) Throughout their history, there have been a number of accidents that have been caused by negligence and disregard of safety precautions. Unfortunately many lives have been cut short or seriously injured as a result. My research will focus on the 2005 Texas City Oil Refinery Explosion. I will attempt

  • Texas City Disaster: a Painful Way to Learn

    2287 Words  | 5 Pages

    Texas City Disaster: a Painful Way to Learn In the bright, clear, spring morning of April 16, 1947, an event occurred in the Texas City Harbor in Texas City. To the survivors of this disaster, what happened on that Sunday morning was like the end of the world. Sadly, to those who did not make it, this indeed became the end of their world. This event that brings unforgettable painful memories from 50 years ago is referred to as the Texas City disaster. It all began with the French cargo ship

  • Sugar Factory Fire Essay

    546 Words  | 2 Pages

    On or about 7 February 2008 an explosion occurred at the Imperial Sugar Factory in the city of Portwentworth Georgia was caused from dust, which resulted in the loss of 14 employees whom suffered from major burn injuries (Sugar dust explosion and fire, 2009). Key issues that were identified for that caused the explosion were combustible dust hazard, combustible dust accumulation, and equipment design and maintenance (Sugar dust explosion and fire, 2009). The explosion caused major damage to the

  • Texas City Disaster Essay

    1000 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Texas City Disaster of 1947 was a disaster that really left a impact to the world. The Texas City Disaster of 1947 was one of the world's worst industrial disasters. Two days before the disaster a fire had occurred at the dock where the boat was stationed. The fire that happened two days before the disaster was started by a cigarette. And their is a law stating that their is no smoking on or around the dock. The grandcamp boat was a recently re-activated boat that measured 437 feet in length

  • Toxic Waste Sites in Texas

    1017 Words  | 3 Pages

    Major Toxic Waste Sites in Texas When thinking about the most polluted states in our country, California and New York instantly pop into our mind. What most people don’t know, however, is that Texas now ranks number one in most categories of pollution. Whether it be increased emissions from refineries in Beaumont, large pits filled with contamination at Kelley Air Force Base, or polluted water at Lake Sam Rayburn, Texas has more than its fair share of toxic waste. Exxon/Mobil, one of the nation’s

  • Environmental Changes In Houston Texas

    1705 Words  | 4 Pages

    Houston, Texas is a city that has grown and thrived off of the energy industry. The city that has been endearingly termed “the petrochemical capital of the world”, is home to oil refineries that produce a quarter of the oil in the entire United States (Ngai & Sims, 2017). Some of the country’s largest oil companies like Valero, ExxonMobil, and Marathon, have chosen to establish refineries in the booming city. These refineries together produce about 2 million barrels of crude oil per day (Blum & Blunt

  • Summary: Premature Babies In Corpus Christi Stasis

    1369 Words  | 3 Pages

    Rhiannon Meyers, and Steve Lerner discuss the birth defects in Corpus Christi and the possible causes of the matter. Meyers, Langlois, and Lerner all used the idea of stasis to state the local issue of the health of babies in the southern parts of Texas. Each one of these articles used all of the steps in stasis to discuss this issue except for evaluation. Each article did a wonderful job describing the problem as a precipitating cause. The articles discussed how the problem of birth defects in the

  • Oil and Texas: A Cultural History

    1615 Words  | 4 Pages

    Oil and Texas: A Cultural History "Soon the 4-inch drill pipe…shot skyward. After the mud, water, and pipe were blown out, gas followed, but only for a short time. Then the well was very quiet. We ventured back, after our wild scramble for safety, to find things in a terrible mess...We started shoveling the mud away-when, without warning, a lot of heavy mud shot out of the well with the report of a cannon…In a very short time oil was going up through the top of the derricks, and rocks were being

  • The 1979 Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant Accident

    1587 Words  | 4 Pages

    continue to see organizational accidents. These accidents may be much rarer than your average car accident yet can kill and injure many people on a wide scale. We can look at the 1979 Three Mile Island nuclear power plant accident. The 2005 BP Texas oil refinery accident which killed 15 people injuring over 180 (CBS,2007) and many more to help examine why these accidents occur and why some are inevitable. This essay critically evaluates the inevitability of organizational accidents. Specifically, it

  • poo

    807 Words  | 2 Pages

    the new leases. Yet, a series of accidents on its infrastructure makes reform seem doubtful for the company. Since 2005, PBS reported of four major incidents involving BP. The first incident was an explosion that killed 15 people at BP’s Texas refinery in Texas City. BP did not replace the old blown-down drums, a safety feature, with safer, modern flares to save money. An investigation commissioned by former Secretary of State James Baker concluded that this incident was preventable and BP failed in

  • Texas Political Culture Essay

    663 Words  | 2 Pages

    is that Texas is undergoing many changes. Texas is also a large state making it hard to define the political culture of Texas. Texas is also diverse and has many political or subcultures within its borders. Texas is harder to generalize due to the historical origins and development of the state. There are large cities, borders, rural areas, and so on. Texas is also a one party state. The Democratic Party has dominated Texas for over a century. The problem with the political culture of Texas is that

  • Personal Narrative: We Came To America

    720 Words  | 2 Pages

    find a well-established area to do so. When my great-grandfather adapted to the Houston area finding a place to raise a family was not difficult. Houston was a developing city with great potential for its residents. This is when he decided to start a livelihood for his family in one of the oldest Hispanic neighborhoods in the City of Houston, Magnolia Park. In 1907, Magnolia Park was a community that was filled primarily with non-Hispanic whites. However, it became a Mexican community by 1911. For

  • The Athabasca Oil Sands

    712 Words  | 2 Pages

    viscosity. To gain access to this oil, steam or hot water is used to heat it up then it is trucked to an upgrader with separates the oil from the other components after it is separated it goes to a refinery which separates out waist from the synthetic light crude oil then this oil is piped to refineries in the united states where it is refined into our fuels. There are three main oil sand sight in Albert including, Athabasca, peace river and coldlake oil sands with the Athabasca oil sands being the

  • Essay On Marcario Garcia

    698 Words  | 2 Pages

    MARCARIO GARCIA JANUARY 20, 1920 ­ DECEMBER 24, 1972 FIRST IMMIGRANT TO RECEIVE MEDAL OF HONOR BORN IN MEXICO ­ ADOPTED TEXAS Marcario Garcia was not born in Texas; rather his parents carried him across the border from Mexico to Texas as an infant. The family settled in Sugar Land, Texas, where they worked as low­paid farm workers and raised ten children. The land was originally owned by the Mexican government and was part of the land grant to Stephen F. Austin. Very early, sugarcane stalks from

  • BP Plc: A Struggling Company in 1909 to the 6th Largest Today

    2678 Words  | 6 Pages

    On April 20, 2011, an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico exploded on British Petroleum’s (BP) Deepwater Horizon. As a result, of the 126 BP crew members aboard, 11-15 were reported missing. Six days later, underwater robots reveal at least two leaks are dumping 1,000 barrels of oil into the Gulf per day. Consequently, this would become one of the worst oil spills in the history of the United States and perhaps the petroleum industry. This recent Oil Spill portrays one of many dilemmas BP has faced as

  • BP Case Study: BP Oil Company

    1272 Words  | 3 Pages

    2005, an explosion at BP’s Texas City oil refinery killed 15 people and injured more than180 people. The accident cost the firm US $2 billion in damages and lawsuits (Murry, B. 2010). According to the OSHA (United States Occupational safety and Health Administration) Citations 760 and 761 BP was responsible for wilful and flagrant violations of safety standards. It happened intentionally and showing indifference to its employees and are yet to pay the fines from Texas City explosion. CSR review BP

  • The Keystone Oil Pipeline Project

    1037 Words  | 3 Pages

    United States and Canada. The Keystone Pipeline itself is an oil pipe line which runs from the western Canadian sedimentary basin in Alberta, Canada to refineries in the United States. These refineries are located in three different main locations: Steele City, Nebraska, Wood River and Patoka, Illinois and refineries located in the gulf coast of Texas. The pipeline carries three different kinds of oil which are synthetic crude and diluted bitumen, and also a light crude oil. The light crude oil comes

  • Exxon Merger Essay

    2300 Words  | 5 Pages

    Prior to the year of 1999, Exxon and Mobil were the two largest American oil companies, which were direct descendants of the John D. Rockefeller’s broken up Standard Oil Company. In 1998 Exxon and Mobil signed an eighty billion dollar merger agreement in hope to form Exxon Mobil Corporation, the largest company ever created. Such a merger seems astonishing, not only because it reunited parts of Rockefeller’s Standard Oil Company, but also because it would be extremely difficult for the Federal Trade

  • Texas

    10528 Words  | 22 Pages

    Texas, one of the West South Central states of the United States. It borders Mexico on the southwest and the Gulf of Mexico on the southeast. To the west is New Mexico, to the north and northeast lie Oklahoma and Arkansas, and Louisiana bounds Texas on the east. Austin is the capital of Texas. Houston is the largest city. Texas is the size of Ohio, Indiana, and all the New England and Middle Atlantic states combined, and its vast area encompasses forests, mountains, deserts and dry plains, and a