The chemical penetrates the skin and reacts with the calcium in bones. Swallowing just a small amount, or getting small splashes on the skin, can be fatal, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In its gaseous state, the CDC says, low levels of hydrogen fluoride can irritate the eyes, nose and respiratory tract. Breathing it at high levels “can cause death from an irregular heartbeat or fluid buildup in the lungs.”
A PES spokeswoman said the company does not comment on operations.
James Eninger is a retired engineer who worked with the toxic chemical in the development of high-energy lasers at engineering firm TRW. He now works to convince refineries to stop using it in conjunction with highly flammable hydrocarbons.
“Just to give you an idea of how toxic it is,” said Eninger, “just half an ounce of it, which is about a third of a whiskey jigger, if it were released into a large conference room would potentially kill people.”
Eninger is active with the Torrance Refinery Action Alliance in California, which formed after a 2015 explosion at an ExxonMobile refinery near Los Angeles also caused a near-miss with hydrofluoric acid. He says neutralizing and removing such a large amount of hydrofluoric acid would have to be done “very carefully and with a lot of oversight.”
According to Honeywell, a major manufacturer of the chemical, testimony submitted as part of a State Senate hearing on the subject suggested it was detected but was dismissed as the result of a faulty instrument.
EPA spokeswoman Terri White said the agency will install four air monitors to check for leaks during the neutralization process. Those are in addition to four monitors the agency currently has on-site.
“These monitors operate continuously 24 hours a day, and the results will be able to be viewed in real-time by the Philadelphia Haz-Mat unit on-site,” White said in an email.
In addition to the EPA, multiple state, city and federal agencies are conducting on-site investigations into the explosion, including the city’s fire marshal’s office, the Police Department and the Office of Emergency Management, as well as the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, the federal Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Fire Department spokeswoman Kathy Matheson said the investigations could take “months to complete.”
“The refinery site remains a very active scene that has yet to be put under control,” Matheson said.
About 50 refineries continue to use hydrofluoric acid across the country, including the PBF Paulsboro refinery in Paulsboro, New Jersey, and the Monroe Energy refinery in Trainer, Delaware County.
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This article was updated to clarify the quantity of hydrofluoric acid.