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posted by martyb on Monday February 16 2015, @04:12AM   Printer-friendly
from the you-made-your-bed... dept.

Reuters reports that managers at US oil refineries are going to the mats, sleeping on recently purchased mattresses inside rental trailers, as refinery workers enter the third week of their strike at nine US oil refineries that experts and some employees say raises concerns over safety and operations. For months, retired refinery worker John Ostberg from BP's Toledo Refinery has been warning his bosses in emails about their plans to run the refineries with replacement workers and supervisors if a strike occurred. He fears that replacement workers are not properly trained, or too far removed from the frontlines, to respond to unit upsets and other problems that can escalate quickly without experienced intervention. “Management says it’s safe. I disagree,” says Ostberg.

At least three of the nine US oil refineries targeted by a nationwide strike of USW members have reported upsets and unplanned repairs since their workers walked out on February 1 and one of the refineries has shut down completely. Criff Reyes, who has worked Tesoro's Martinez Refinery alkylation unit for 16 years, says he believes that Tesoro opted to shut down the plant — rather than restart it following maintenance — because managers are not qualified or experienced enough to run it after about 400 USW members walked out. Meanwhile Ostberg, who helped run the refinery operating center (ROC) — the heart of the plant — warns that if there is a problem with one unit at the refinery, it can quickly grow to other units and often takes more manpower to put under control. “I sit behind a blast-proof wall, so I’m not worried about my safety," says Ostberg. "But I fear for everyone else.”

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 16 2015, @07:12PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 16 2015, @07:12PM (#145756)

    It depends on just how far apart wealth wise you want to compare.

    The rich use energy for much more than their essential daily needs. Luxury takes energy. Not only to use, but to make, and dispose of. Luxury is also VERY inefficient, it can afford to be after all.

    Compare that to the really-really poor, who have nothing to spare, and for whom all their energy consumption goes directly towards their survival.

    Consider the case of India vs the USA.

    India vs USA energy use [nationmaster.com]

    Most of those stats show the USA consumes betweem 5 and 19 TIMES the energy of India, despite having 1/3 the population. [nationsonline.org] (USA: 317 Million vs India: 1.2 Billion)

    The only reason poor people are hard on the planet, is because they have no other choice.

  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Monday February 16 2015, @08:17PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Monday February 16 2015, @08:17PM (#145796) Journal

    The only reason poor people are hard on the planet, is because they have no other choice.

    But that's it. Rich people can cut back, or distribute away more of their wealth should they insist on the status signalling behavior. Poor people can't. And something like a policy of making gasoline expensive doesn't impact the rich person very much. It's notoriously regressive. Such a policy tends to create more poor people with their lack of choice and societies with large poor populations tend to be very weak on environmental protection.