Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that Bluewater Texas Terminals, LLC will revise air permits for an offshore oil terminal in Texas. This revision comes after communities in the Texas Coastal Bend, alongside regional and national groups, demanded that EPA enforce the Clean Air Act to limit dangerous pollution with legal and expert-witness comments submitted by Earthjustice and Environmental Integrity Project.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) in a September 1st letter to Bluewater Texas Terminals, LLC, (“Bluewater”) addressed pending Clean Air Act permit applications.
The EPA has denied a permit for an offshore oil terminal proposed on the Gulf Coast, ruling that the Bluewater Texas terminal would need to reduce its air .
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has revoked the permit for a proposed 1.92 million barrels-per-day offshore oil export terminal off the coast of Corpus Christi, Texas. The Bluewater oil export.
Among Piers: Cranes land in South Carolina
Berth announcements and other good news from California to Gulf Coast to Florida 1,463 6 minutes read Fifteen hybrid rubber-tired gantry cranes near the Port of Charleston, South Carolina. (Photo: English Purcell/SCPA)
The arrival of the South Carolina Ports Authority’s 15 hybrid rubber-tired gantry cranes served as a big sign that the first phase of the Hugh K. Leatherman Terminal is nearing completion.
The RTG cranes arrived in North Charleston on Dec. 11 in a record-setting shipment for Shanghai-based manufacturer ZPMC. It was the most RTG cranes ever loaded by ZPMC onto one vessel bound for the United States.