Drücke „Enter”, um zum Inhalt zu springen.

[KCB #481] KEYCODE BAYER 481

Bayer CropScience just announced to finally stop producing the Bhopal chemical MIC at its Institute/US plant. A great success after a quarter-century campaign! The company now has to ensure that all workers are offered adequate new jobs.
The Coalition against Bayer Dangers, based in Germany, has introduced several countermotions to Bayer´s Annual Stockholders´ Meetings demanding that MIC stockpiles in Institute are dismantled. All information on the MIC campaign
CSB safety video depicting events leading to the explosion

The Center for Public Integrity, March 18, 2011

Chemical that killed thousands in Bhopal finally abandoned

Sooner than expected, the last major U.S. producer of the chemical that killed thousands in Bhopal, India, 26 years ago –and was nearly released in a 2008 explosion in West Virginia –is ceasing production of the compound.
An announcement Friday by Bayer CropScience, whose plant in Institute, West Virginia, stores 200,000 pounds of methyl isocyante (MIC), coincided with the start of a court hearing in a lawsuit by residents seeking to stop the company from restarting the unit that produces MIC.
The company, a subsidiary of German conglomerate Bayer AG, said in a news release that it will decommission the MIC unit. “The company will move forward immediately with decommissioning of the reconfigured MIC and associated production units,” the company said.
Bayer CropScience said it was planning to start the MIC unit and begin transitional production of the compound, sold in an insecticide known as Temik, but “uncertainty over delays has led the company to the conclusion that a restart of production can no longer be expected in time for the 2011 growing season.”
“This was a very difficult decision, particularly as our employees did everything possible to ensure the operational safety of our newly-constructed MIC unit during the remaining production period”, said Achim Noack, a member of Bayer CropScience’s managing board. “Our business case was based on our ability to supply the market needs beginning in 2011, and with the recent delays, that plan is no longer economically viable.”
Following a 2010 agreement with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Bayer CropScience agreed to phase-out Temik by 2012.
Bayer said it already had reduced risks of an accident. The blast killed two workers, and flying metal came perilously close to breaching an MIC storage tank, board officials said.

March 18, 2011, Charleston Gazette

Bayer gives up fight to restart Institute MIC unit

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Bayer CropScience has decided not to restart the unit that makes the deadly chemical methyl isocyanate at its Institute plant, officials revealed today.
Al Emch, a lawyer for the company, told a federal judge that Bayer officials in Germany did not want to restart the MIC unit while there was an ongoing government inspection of the facility.
U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration officials are conducting a broad review of the plant, including the MIC unit, and have said they may not complete their work until September.
Emch said that timeline made it impossible for Bayer to resume producing the pesticide Temik, which is made with MIC, until after the 2011 growing season had ended.
The move ends a quarter-century effort by some local residents to rid the Kanawha Valley of the Institute plant‚s stockpile of MIC, the chemical best known for killing thousands of people in a 1984 leak at a Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, India.
„I am heartened with Bayer‘s decision and believe that we are safer as a result,“ said Maya Nye, a leader of the local group People Concerned About MIC, and one of 16 residents who had sued to block Bayer from restarting the unit.
But Bayer‚s decision will also likely hasten the elimination of 220 jobs that the company had planned to phase out over the next two years.
Bayer issued a news release confirming the decision, which Emch announced publicly during a hastily called hearing before Chief U.S. District Judge Joseph R. Goodwin.
„This was a very difficult decision, particularly as our employees did everything possible to ensure the operational safety of our newly constructed MIC unit during the remaining production period,“ said Achim Noack, a member of Bayer‘s board of management. „Our business case was based on our ability to supply the market needs beginning in 2011, and with the recent delays, that plan is no longer economically viable.“
Emch told Goodwin that Bayer‚s decision was made following a series of „high-level meetings“ at the parent company‘s corporate headquarters in Germany Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.
„Ultimately, the precipitating factor was this: Bayer determined that it was not beginning the restart while there was an ongoing or open inspection going on by a government regulatory agency,“ Emch said.
Already, Goodwin had blocked Bayer from restarting MIC production for a month, with a Feb. 10 temporary restraining order in a case brought by residents who wanted to stop the company from ever making the chemical again. The judge had scheduled a hearing to start Monday to consider whether he would grant the residents a long-term injunction.
OSHA launched its inspection on March 2, at least in part in response to a recommendation made in January by the U.S. Chemical Safety Board as part of its final report on the August 2008 explosion and fire that killed two Bayer workers. The explosion and fire was not in the MIC production unit, but CSB investigators warned that it came dangerously close to an MIC storage tank, and could have created a Bhopal-scale disaster.
Bayer was preparing to start making MIC again as early as Feb. 17, following a project to remake the unit and reduce its stockpile of the chemical by 80 percent. That project was nearly completed when Bayer announced in January that it was going to stop making, using and storing any MIC at the plant by mid-2012, as part of a corporate restructuring and an agreement with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to cease sales of Temik because of concerns the product could make food unsafe.
At Institute, Bayer uses MIC to make aldicarb, the active ingredient in Temik. Aldicarb from Institute is shipped to another Bayer plant in Georgia, where it is used to formulate Temik. Bayer wanted to restart the MIC unit so it can continue making aldicarb and Temik for another 18 months until the EPA deal takes effect.
Friday‚s announcement also comes as Bill DePaulo, a lawyer for the residents, sought to have Goodwin disqualify the judge‘s own expert witness, Texas A&M University engineer Sam Mannan. DePaulo alleged in a court filing that Mannan had based his report to Goodwin largely on a study prepared by Bayer.
In a response filed just before Friday‚s hearing, Bayer lawyers said DePaulo simply didn‘t like Mannan’s conclusions that a catastrophic MIC accident at the Institute plant was extraordinarily unlikely to ever occur. By Ken Ward Jr.