Massive Fire Erupted at West Coast’s Largest Oil Refinery Near Los Angeles

The Associated Press
By The Associated Press
October 18, 2017US News
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Massive Fire Erupted at West Coast’s Largest Oil Refinery Near Los Angeles
In this Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2017 photo, a fire rages at the Chevron El Segundo Refinery in El Segundo, Calif. (Jack Zellweger via AP)

A fire that erupted at the West Coast’s largest oil refinery threatened storage tanks and sent huge flames into the sky and black smoke across neighborhoods before crews quickly smothered it.

Dozens of firefighters responded late Tuesday to the 1,000-acre Chevron El Segundo Refinery just south of Los Angeles, which processes nearly 275,000 barrels of crude per day.

Residents were urged to close windows and shelter in place as dramatic flames roiled at the facility and thick plumes of acrid smoke traveled through neighborhoods. Surrounding streets were briefly closed, but no evacuations were ordered. No injuries were reported.

Crews using firefighting foam kept the blaze from spreading to storage tanks and within about a half-hour, there was little visible flame.

Chevron officials did not immediately comment Wednesday on the possible cause. Fires at such refineries have had implications for gas prices, though it wasn’t yet clear if this one would.

The refinery, the West Coast’s largest, supplies 40 percent of the jet fuel to nearby Los Angeles International Airport and has 20 percent of the gasoline market share in Southern California, according to the company’s website.

Daily production includes 110,000 barrels of gasoline and 100,000 barrels of jet and diesel fuels. Other products include fuel oils, coke and liquefied petroleum gas.

NTD Photo
Chevron’s El Segundo Refinery is seen while their profits rise and the local price of gas hovers well above the $3 per gallon mark on April 28, 2006 in El Segundo, California. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)

About 1,100 Chevron employees and 300 contract employees work there.

The El Segundo refinery dates to 1911. Its name is Spanish for “the second,” and was bestowed because it was the second refinery built by Chevron predecessor Standard Oil Co. The first refinery was built at Richmond in 1901.

Chevron was fined nearly $1 million by the state of California for a major fire in 2012 at a refinery in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Associated Press