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An explosion on Nov. 13 at a chemical plant in Jilin City spilled 100 tons of benzene and nitrobenzene into the river.
On Nov. 13, 2005, an explosion at a chemical plant in Jilin, China, owned by the China National Petroleum Corporation released approximately 100 metric tons of benzene and nitrobenzene into the Songhua River.
And in the final months of the Clinton Presidency the Justice Department levelled a ninety-seven-count indictment against the company, for covering up the discharge of ninety-one tons of benzene, a carcinogen, from its refinery in Corpus Christi, Texas.
In the case, a whistle-blower revealed that the refinery had released about 91 metric tons of benzene, a volatile solvent and a known carcinogen, in its liquid waste streams in 1995, about 15 times the refinery's limit, according to the Justice Department.
The ultraviolet Differential Absorption Lidar, or DIAL test, showed what the people of Tonawanda had suspected for years: Tonawanda Coke wasn't releasing three to five tons of benzene into the air, as it had been reporting to regulators.
These so-called lost loads include more than 20,000 tons of lead, a neurotoxin; 520 tons of benzene, a carcinogen; and 355 tons of methyl ethyl ketone, a flammable solvent some in the industry call "methyl ethyl death".
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The indictment contends that Koch had won a waiver to comply with Clean Air Act limits on benzene until 1995, but that that year the company had at least 91 metric tons of uncontrolled benzene in its liquid waste streams, far more than the limit of six metric tons that applied to the refinery.
Wealthy, powerful people in the news: Charles and David Koch David Koch, the billionaire brothers at the helm of oil conglomerate Koch Industries, are finally seeing an end to charges that a subsidiary, Koch Petroleum Group, spewed tons of toxic benzene into the environment in 1995 and then tried to hide it from government investigators.
The state acknowledged today that it failed to manage adequately the cleanup of a solid waste landfill here, a lapse environmentalists say may have allowed tons of heavy metals, benzenes and other carcinogens to seep into the groundwater and possibly the Raritan River.
For every ton of coal carbonized only about two to three pounds (0.9 to 1.35 kilograms) of benzene are obtained.
Even after regulators forced the firm to fix blatant sources of benzene, sophisticated measuring equipment found the solvent seeping out of the plant at a rate of 91 tons per year, according to an EPA analysis.
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