Federal report analyzes possible cause of TPC explosion amid litigation

Federal report analyzes possible cause of TPC explosion amid litigation

TPC pretrial
PORT NECHES, Texas — Lawyers have filed more than 500 individual lawsuits since the TPC explosion.

One year after the explosions, litigation is in early stages, with pre-trial hearings happening jointly in Orange County, which allows lawyers on both sides to talk about logistics.

This week, TPC Group said the company has settled more than 5,000 homeowner claims under the voluntary claims program and reimbursed more than 18,800 residents for evacuation expenses.

What caused the TPC explosion? The questions have gone unanswered, but a federal report released last month offered crucial clues about what went wrong last year.

The U.S. Chemical Safety Board released a 13-page report detailing the timeline of what led up to the TPC explosion. The report does not state the root cause, but it helps explain what happened.

After the TPC explosions unleashed chaos and confusion in Mid County one year ago, federal officials now have a better idea of what went wrong.

Abut 6,000 gallons of liquid vapor, mostly butadiene, escaped from one of the processing towers at the TPC Group plant in Port Neches. Then two minutes later, the plant was on fire.

Attorney Eric Newell with Brent Coon and Associates is representing victims of the TPC explosion.

“One of the main things that we were gonna be looking at early on was the popcorning in the pipes,” he said last month when the report was initially released.

Industrial workers are familiar with the term popcorning, which is when popcorn polymers form in equipment from oxygen and butadiene reacting.

Eight days before the explosion, TPC Group installed temporary filters to catch any popcorn polymer chunks, the report stated.

TPC Group maintains it is too early to know the exact cause.

However, the facility in Port Neches also had a history of air quality violations, according to the EPA. TPC Group was fined $275,000 over the past 10 years.

In one case, state regulators cited corrosion, which was an issue mentioned in several violations, on a butadiene transfer line as the source of a leak.

The TPC Group plant was also non-compliant with the Federal Clean Air Act in every quarter since January 2017.

Lauren Hensley, BMT 12NewsNow, Federal report analyzes possible cause of TPC explosion amid litigation. 

search

our offices

  • Beaumont Office

    215 Orleans St.
    Beaumont, TX 77701

  • Houston Office

    300 Fannin St.
    Suite 300
    Houston, TX 77002

  • Burbank Office

    4111 W. Alameda Avenue
    Suite 611
    Burbank, California 91505

  • Denver Office

    3801 E. Florida Ave.
    Suite 905
    Denver, CO 80210-2500

  • Philadelphia Office

    1500 Walnut Street
    Suite 2000
    Philadelphia, PA 19102

FROM THE BLOG

BCA ATTORNEY ROBERT A. SCHWARTZ HONORED BY TEXAS BAR FOUNDATION

12:00PM CST – Wednesday April 11, 2024 – Mr. Robert A. Schwartz with Brent Coon & Associates has been elected to membership in the Fellows of the Texas Bar Foundation.  Fellows of the Foundation are selected for their outstanding professional achievements and their demonstrated commitment to the improvement of the justice system throughout the state…

Texas City BP explosion attorney hasn’t seen “any change” in industry regulation

Sunday marks 20 years since an isomerization unit explosion at what was BP’s Texas City oil refinery killed 15 people and injured about 180 others, resulting in one of the deadliest refinery explosions in the country’s history. Beaumont Attorney Brent Coon represented many of those injured in the 2005 blasts, including Eva Rowe, whose mother…

TEXAS LAWYER – Judge Spends 3 Hours Explaining His Decision

TEXAS LAWYER – January 17, 2025 – By Adolfo Pesquera A judge sympathetic to the hundreds of victims of the massive Port Neches refinery explosion was not able to convince the defendant corporation to pay $292 A proposed plea agreement between federal prosecutors and TPC Group that involved negotiations that excluded the crime victims, fell…