Welcome to the town that is falling into
the earth
THEY goin’ down,” John Boudreaux recalls telling a colleague as he
recorded the watery cataclysm unfolding before him with an iPhone camera.
By Alexander Nazaryan
“They”
were a grove of cypress trees; “down” was into a sinkhole in rural Louisiana
that had steadily grown to a depth of several hundred feet of fetid water — and
was in the throes of a violent growth spurt.
Boudreaux’s
video, posted on YouTube in late August, went viral in the way that recordings
of disaster tend to, leading to alarmist headlines: eg “Mining Madness:
750-Foot-Deep Sinkhole Swallows Louisiana Town”.
That
sinkhole was then a year old, and Boudreaux, an emergency response official,
had filmed it several times by then, though never before had he captured it
burping with such violence, sending combustible methane up through fractures in
the earth while sucking down trees and soil. Boudreaux is not surprised that
his video has spurred widespread fascination.
Speaking
to Newsweek from the town of Bayou Corne, which has been largely emptied as the
sinkhole gnaws away at its borders, he says: “How often do you see a tree go
straight down?”
So
far, there hasn’t been a fiery explosion. But, in addition to consuming all
those trees, the sinkhole has caused small earthquakes and spewed gas and oil.
And it’s still growing. State officials estimate it will expand from its
current size of about 26 acres to at least 40 acres over the next several
years. If, while doing so, it breaks through a modest earthen barrier, it will
poison the waters of Bayou Corne, forever spoiling these verdant banks. Once a
rural paradise, Bayou Corne could become a ghost town as a result of a man-made
ulcer whose depths defy understanding.
Cancer
Alley, a stretch of about 100 miles between New Orleans and Baton Rouge, is
home to some 150 petrochemical plants, making these swamplands perhaps the most
industrialised (and polluted) region in the United States.
The
latest plague ravaging Cancer Alley is that enormous sinkhole in Assumption
Parish, a burgeoning cavity that is a pestilence both real and symbolic,
relentlessly swallowing land while reminding residents of the despoliation the
past 60 years have inflicted on their sinuous bayous and abundant cypress
groves. As Bayou Corne’s citizens abandon their homes, fleeing the spectres of
methane and vandals and depressed home values, they stand to become yet another
Louisiana community sacrificed to the twin gods of oil and gas.
“It’s
like a science-fiction movie,” says Marylee Orr, who heads the Louisiana
Environmental Action Network, which she runs out of a ranch-style home in Baton
Rouge decorated with Kennedy brothers memorabilia. She and other activists are
doggedly following the efforts of Texas Brine — the mining company responsible
for the sinkhole — to contain the damage and compensate the working-class
residents of Bayou Corne, many of whom own little beyond what is now
irredeemably ravaged land. At the same time, she and the so-called Green Army
of retired Army Lieutenant General Russel Honoré are desperate to end a long-standing
laxity toward energy companies, one that gave rise to the quip that the flag of
Texaco flies above the state capitol building in Baton Rouge.
“We
have the best government in Louisiana that the oil and gas business can buy,”
says Honoré, a native of Louisiana who grew up in rural poverty, rising through
the military ranks and heading, in his most prominent role, Joint Task Force
Katrina after the 2005 hurricane hit New Orleans. Of the seemingly endless
favours Louisiana has offered energy companies through either taxation or
legislation (or the lack thereof), the man known as the Ragin’ Cajun says, “We
the dumbest asses of all.”
Texas
Brine, a Houston company, arrived in Bayou Corne in 1976. It drilled a cavern
now known as Oxy Geismar #1, so called because the land was owned by the
Occidental Chemical Company, which cutely calls itself Oxy, and because the
product of that mine travels via pipeline to an Oxy plant in Geismar, in nearby
Ascension Parish. Texas Brine drilled Oxy Geismar #2 that same year, then, in
1982, drilled Oxy Geismar #3.
Salt
is abundant in Louisiana’s marshy soil, with 127 saline domes distributed
throughout the state. The salt dome at Assumption Parish, three miles in length
and one in width, is called Napoleonville, an allusion to the French settlers
who arrived here more than three centuries ago. It shares that imperial name
with a nearby village of 660 residents. Overall, the state has 254
solution-mined caverns bored into its salt domes, says Patrick Courreges,
communications director for the state’s Department of Natural Resources.
Texas
Brine, which proudly brands itself “the largest independent brine producer in
the United States”, came to harvest the contents of the dome. By injecting
water to about 5,600 feet below the ground, it created an ever-expanding cavern
that filled with highly salty water known as brine. As Texas Brine continued to
inject water into the cavern, the cavity grew, filling with brine that was
continually being pumped out.
After
it is shipped to Geismar, the brine is subjected to the chlor-alkali process,
which turns the salt (sodium chloride) into chlorine and caustic soda (sodium
hydroxide). Both of these are vital to the petrochemical industry. Chlorine is
fundamental in the composition of plastics like polyvinyl chloride (PVC), a
material that goes into everything from pipes to clothing. A website for the
Chlorine Institute, a lobbying group, notes the element’s presence in so many
items (bullet-proof vests, antihistamines, surfboards) that nobody could
possibly miss the point. As for the sodium hydroxide, it is crucial to a
process called caustic washing, which helps purify the oil housed in vast
refineries that stand like battlements along what was once Huckleberry Finn’s
and Tom Sawyers riparian paradise. Also known as lye, sodium hydroxide goes
into soap and can be used to cure foods like olives. We are dependent on oil,
but we are just as dependent on brine. Or, as a company representative put it
to me, “This country has an enormous appetite for smartphone cases”.
Those
cheap goods come at a cost. On Nov 20, 1980, a mine on the Jefferson Island
salt dome — which sat in the middle of Lake Peigneur, in Iberia Parish
—collapsed after the 14-inch-wide drill bit of a Texaco oil rig poked through
its ceiling. That amounted to pulling the plug out of a full bathtub, water
rushing into the hollows below in what the obscure-history site Damn
Interesting artfully calls a “swirling vortex of doom”. Eleven barges and a
tugboat were sucked into the whirlpool, whose force started to pull water from
the Delcambre Canal, reversing the direction of that waterway and creating
Louisiana’s tallest waterfall. More than 65 acres of land were lost. Somehow,
nobody died.
Disaster
edged closer to Bayou Corne in 2003, when Grand Bayou — a tiny town about a
mile east — had to be evacuated after methane started leaking from a salt
cavern there. Grand Bayou is flat nothingness today, a concrete foundation
suggesting a house of which no other traces remain. A portico sits on the
bayou’s overgrown edge; next to it is a marker that names the town and quotes
the eminent 19th century Bostonian Oliver Wendell Holmes: “Where we love is
home — home that our feet may leave but not our hearts.”
Despite
these twin disasters, most people who built or bought houses in Bayou Corne say
they had little conception of the malevolence lurking in the cypress thickets
beyond the edge of town. “We were living in what truly is a bayou paradise,”
says Dennis Landry, a retired teacher, oil industry worker and real estate
developer of Cajun descent who can trace his family’s arrival in Louisiana back
to the 1780s. In 1994, he founded a subdivision of neat brick manses on the
south side of Route 70, along the lush banks of Bayou Corne. He called the
subdivision Sportsman’s Paradise, a nickname for Louisiana emblazoned on the
state’s license plates.
Piloting
in his boat down the bayou, he rhapsodises on the pleasures of living here,
calling one branch of the lazy stream the “most lonesome bayou in Louisiana”.
That’s a paradox, considering that industry hems in this wilderness. But when
he’s on his boat, Landry forgets all that. “This is one of the few places in
the world where a fella can live and, when those cool breezes in the fall start
blowing, he can make an early morning hunt, catch a mess of fish, and still
make it to [Louisiana State University’s] Tiger Stadium on time for kickoff in
Baton Rouge.”
But
a mandatory evacuation order has been in place for more than a year, and though
many of his neighbours remain (it is not yet a forced evacuation), the
subdivision has the uneasy feel of emptiness, as does the poorer section of
town on the side of Route 70. Landry laments that “now, paradise is
threatened”.
The
terror of sinkholes dates at least to the Bible. In the Book of Numbers, a band
of 250 led by an Israelite named Korah rebel against Moses. Yahweh does not
take their disloyalty lightly:
“The
earth opened her mouth, and swallowed them up, and their houses, and all the
men that appertained unto Korah, and all their goods.” (Numbers 16:31)
The
sinkhole in Bayou Corne does not, as far as anyone knows, have a divine origin.
Texas Brine was always aware that its Oxy #3 cavern was close to the western
edge of the Napoleonville salt dome, but there was no firm state regulation on
how close was too close. Company engineers figured they had a buffer of 150
feet, though they was relying on grievously outdated geological surveys from
the 1950s.
About
nine years after the well was drilled, in 1991, a study by Sandia National
Laboratories suggested that Texas Brine was perilously close to puncturing
Napoleonville’s edge. A subsequent 1995 report by Sandia found the Oxy #3
cavern to be located on an “overhang” and warned that an “inadequate buffer
existed”. That report ditched the desiccated language of science for this
ominous prediction: “Man’s actions can change many things, often unwittingly,
and sometimes with quite unexpected results.”
But
the reports went unheeded, as did later warnings, even after an internal Texas
Brine memo plainly revealed that some within the company were worried: “If we
get greedy on our salt extraction… we could cause disaster.” The mining
continued until May 2009. A year later, Texas Brine tried to reopen the cavern,
only to have it fail a mechanical integrity test. In early 2011, Texas Brine
plugged and abandoned Oxy Geismar #3.
The
bubbles that started surfacing on Bayou Corne in the late spring of 2011 could
have been caused by nothing more than natural decomposition. Swamp gas —
methane — often bubbles up from the bayous of Louisiana, which are rich with
decaying organic matter. But Dennis Landry suspected otherwise. His grandfather
had been a swamper in these bayous, clearing cypress groves and collecting moss
(then used in upholstery). On May 30, 2012, When Landry and his wife first saw
bubbles near one of three natural gas pipelines that runs beneath Bayou Corne,
they figured a leak had sprung and quickly called Crosstex, the pipe’s owner.
Company engineers came, did their tests, and found nothing. And yet the waters
still roiled. There were tremors, too, some registering as high as a 3 on the
Richter scale. On Jun 19, without yet knowing the source of the bubbles or
mini-quakes, Assumption Parish declared a state of emergency, fearing
combustible methane.
Then
the ground opened up. On August 3, 2012, the side of the salt cavern deep below
the earth gave way, causing a surface depression that quickly filled with
water; this insta-lake was about 300 feet across and perhaps as many feet deep.
Newly formed fractures allowed methane and oil that had been trapped near the
edges of the dome to burst to the surface, revealing the source of the bubbles
that had befuddled the Landrys back in May.
Officials
immediately descended on Bayou Corne; after Landry demanded and got a flyover
of the sinkhole threatening his property, he saw “a giant mud hole” devouring
the tupelo gum and cypress trees that had uneasily shared this land with pipelines,
wells and storage tanks. “When I passed over the sinkhole, I thought I caught a
glimpse of hell on Earth.”
Texas
Brine moved quickly to contain the damage as the sinkhole grew wider and
deeper, eventually attaining a depth of about 750 feet. It installed
containment and absorption booms to halt the spread of oil. It built relief
wells that are supposed to siphon off escaping methane and send it to flares —
which can be seen around Bayou Corne, burning like the torches of an invading
army. According to Mark Cartwright, the senior Texas Brine executive on site,
some 45m cubic feet of natural gas have been released, though some put that
number at 100m or even 200m. Cartwright says 20m cubic feet of gas have been
burned off and that residents’ fears of an explosion are unfounded. Close to
7,000 barrels of oil have gushed from the sinkhole, too; these leaks have
supposedly been contained, though an oleaginous slick laps at the edges of this
freakish lake.
“We
have a very good understanding of the geology,” Cartwright says, calling the
sinkhole “the most explored and investigated real estate in the world.” That
boast aside, the sinkhole now covers 26 acres and will probably reach about 40,
though its growth remains largely erratic and unpredictable. In truth, nobody
really knows what will happen, because, as Cartwright acknowledges, “Sinkholes
are mysterious by nature, this one in particular”.
Trapped
in a slowly unfurling apocalypse, the residents of this remote town have sought
the attention of the greater public. Louisiana’s governor, the young Republican
Bobby Jindal, finally visited Bayou Corne in March 2013, promising residents
that Texas Brine would pay: “We’re going to hold their feet to the fire. We’re
going to hold them accountable.” The state of Louisiana has sued the company to
recoup its own costs for containing the sinkhole, which currently stand at
about $12m.
But
Jindal’s rhetoric got far less attention than the video shot this past August
by Boudreaux, the head of emergency preparedness for Assumption Parish. Taken
from close range, it shows trees disappearing into the water, which then foams
with whitecapped fury.
Reporters
descended on Bayou Corne, eager for an easy storyline of beleaguered locals
abused by heartless corporations. Mother Jones magazine — named after the
Cork-born campaigner for social justice — deemed Bayou Corne “the biggest
ongoing industrial disaster in the United States you haven’t heard of”.
The
residents of Bayou Corne, those who remain and those who have been displaced,
are grateful for the attention, but they do not want to serve as cautionary
tales. They understand the geopolitical considerations at hand, but their
greatest worries are of the mundane variety.
“We
were forced out of our lives,” says Carla Alleman, who has survived breast
cancer and left behind one of the town’s more sumptuous homes. I met her and
another displaced resident, Candy Blanchard, in the drafty backroom of a
library in Pierre Part. While Alleman is at least darkly cheerful, Blanchard is
morose. She needs me to understand one thing above all: “We are not out of a
house. We are out of a home.”
Shortly
after Jindal’s visit, Texas Brine started offering residents buyouts of their
homes; 68 of 150 have taken the offer, though many say that even the
market-value price is not enough to start a new life elsewhere. That’s why many
are suing, inspired by activist Erin Brockovich, who famously won a $333m
settlement for the residents of Hinkley, California, whose water had been tainted
by the Pacific Gas and Electric Company. Meanwhile, Texas Brine is paying all
Bayou Corne residents $875 per week for their evacuation expenses — even if
some of those collecting this stipend are still in their homes. Texas Brine
wants this to be seen as an act of munificence, though many here are quick to
point out that the company’s contract with the state requires it to compensate
residents in the event of displacement.
“We’ve
done everything imaginable to make these people feel secure in their homes,”
says Cartwright, with a touch of exasperation, describing the air monitors and
subsurface ventilation systems that are supposed to reassure those who’ve
remained, and adding that he would have “no worries whatsoever” about living in
Bayou Corne. His eyes narrow as he considers the motives of locals who’ve
refused buyouts. “Virtually any industrial accident today is an opportunity” to
sue, he says.
That’s
not how Nick and Brenda Romero see it. He is a retired postal worker; she is
also retired, a two-time survivor of cancer who paints colourful bayou scenes
on driftwood, though she says her inspiration has fled, crowded out by
anxieties about home and health.
The
Romeros, like most everyone else here, understand that the petrochemical
industry will not leave Louisiana until the last hydrocarbon is extracted from
the earth. And that is OK, because people here need jobs and people everywhere
need oil. They just wish there was more of a “partnership”, as Nick puts it. Of
companies like Texas Brine, he says, “You didn’t respect the environment, and
you didn’t respect the people”.
That’s
maybe an odd sentiment to hear in the conservative backcountry of Louisiana,
but people are growing tired of industry’s profligate rule. A recent New
Orleans Times-Picayune investigation found that “Louisiana missed out on
millions of dollars in oil and gas extraction taxes from 2009 to 2012 because
of a faulty collection and refund process at the Department of Revenue”.
So
shoddy has oversight been that state officials don’t even know how much money
the energy companies owe, its auditing so lackadaisical that last year it
collected just $40,729 in severance taxes (paid for the extraction of resources
like oil and gas).
And
a 2011 report by the Environmental Protection Agency’s inspector general found
Louisiana to have “the lowest enforcement activity” in the region with “a
culture in which the state agency is expected to protect the industry,” instead
of people like the Romeros.
“They
use Louisiana as a trash ground,” says Honoré.
Residents
here whisper about a cancer cluster, about the seemingly high incidence of
breast cancer among women. For 30 years now this area has been called Cancer
Alley, and though some discount the appellation as fear-mongering, others believe
it tells an uneasy truth. Says Landry, “There seems to be a disproportionate
amount of cancer in Louisiana, especially in south Louisiana, especially if
you’re anywhere close to all these chemical plants on the Mississippi River.”
People
in these parts frequently complain of headaches and sore throats, vague ailments
that could be nothing — or portents of corporeal doom. They could be getting
cancer from all that red meat — or from the hydrocarbons they have been
absorbing for decades. At a public meeting in December 2012, Louisiana’s chief
epidemiologist, Raoult C Ratard, told residents that their air was actually
cleaner than that of Baton Rouge. “In my opinion,” he said, “stay away from
Baton Rouge, stick to Bayou Corne.”
Few
trust him. Many have fled, and those who haven’t live in fear, especially since
a natural gas explosion remains an “ongoing potential risk”, acknowledges
Courreges, the Department of Natural Resources spokesman.
Between
cancer and combustion, it’s close to obvious why the streets of Bayou Corne are
empty. Windows have been boarded up; “Keep Out” signs abound.
A
dense conglomeration of petrochemical plants strung along the Mississippi
River, Geismar is where the brine from Bayou Corne travels via pipeline to the
Oxy plant.
Geismar
is also where the name Cancer Alley originated. In 1986, local union workers
protested the arrival of the German chemical company BASF Wyandotte. According
to the book Chronicles from the Environmental Justice Frontline, by J Timmons
Roberts and Melissa M Toffolon-Weiss, “Working with the Sierra Club, they
showed that 15 plants in the Geismar area had dumped 76 million pounds of
toxics into the Mississippi in just one year. They highlighted the links
between contaminated marshes and drinking water and cancer and miscarriage
rates in the parish.”
The
billboards the union workers hoisted around town invoked two horrors. One
asked, “Is BASF Chemicals the Gateway to Cancer Alley?” while another suggested
that the chemical corporation was erecting a “Bhopal on the Bayou”. The latter
is a reference to the 1984 Union Carbide disaster in India that killed
thousands. Geismar’s troubles are much smaller, but the fears stoked by those
billboards linger: Just this past June, an explosion at the Williams Olefins
petrochemical plant killed at least two workers and injured 80.
On
its website, the Louisiana Chemical Association — a lobbying group for an
industry that does not lack influence around here — points out that “chemistry
contributes 28 percent of the material input in clothing.” One article has a
headline that reads like deadpan: “Air Quality Around Louisiana Schools Is
Okay.” (They are some of the worst in the nation, but that’s a whole other pot
of gumbo.)
Regardless
of whether Cancer Alley is an accurate name or not, the Louisiana Cancer
Research Consortium notes that the state has “one of the highest cancer
mortality rates in the nation”. Louisiana is ranked by the United Health
Foundation as the 48th healthiest state in the nation. It can gloat only over
neighbouring Mississippi and Arkansas.
Maybe
Geismar is more than an endless procession of chain-link fences, cylindrical
storage tanks and smokestacks. If so, I missed it. The most vibrant place I
found was a gas station that advertised pork cracklings, its air thick with
dust and grease. For more expensive diversion, there is a strip club in town
called the Crazy Horse Cabaret, with one Yelp review advising to “ask for the
Puerto Rican”. The only hint of a nonchemical past I came across was the
Ashland Plantation, a worn, colonnaded dowager at the edge of town. Like many
of the river plantations here, it is owned by the nearby chemical company — in
this case, Shell. An elderly African-American gentleman parked by the side of
the road said he remembered when you could hunt the plantation’s grounds. Now
he was foraging for fallen pecans in the dry leaf bed next to the fence that
surrounds Ashland.
The
names of the chemicals that flow through Cancer Alley invite thoughts of
villainy — molybdenum oxide, vinyl esters, styrene monomer — yet they are
essential. If you’ve ever eaten yoghurt out of a plastic cup or packaged
something in foam, you’ve benefited from styrene’s durable, flexible carbon
latticework. So be sure to thank the good folks at Americas Styrenics, in St
James, La.
I
took a tour of Cancer Alley with Wilma Subra, a chemist who has become the
region’s most celebrated environmentalist. In 1999, she won a MacArthur
Foundation “genius grant” for her advocacy, much of which is conducted through
the Louisiana Environmental Action Network; after the Deepwater Horizon spill,
the Guardian suggested that she could be bumbling BP chief Tony Hayward’s
“worst nightmare”.
Subra
is an activist, not a polemicist — she is too obviously intelligent for that.
For example, she thinks Jindal has done a generally good job in managing the
Bayou Corne sinkhole, an opinion at odds with that of many locals. She
understands, too, the paradox of Louisiana: Blessed with a cornucopia of
natural resources, as well as a powerful river that bores through the middle of
America, Louisiana is cursed with all the technologies needed to extract,
refine, and transport that wealth. “We don’t have anything,” she says, “and yet
we have everything.”
The
region was explored in the 17th century by the lapsed Jesuit Robert Cavelier de
La Salle, who claimed the land for Louis XIV of France. In 1803, Thomas
Jefferson agreed on the Louisiana Purchase with the French, buying the land for
about $15m, in part to further his vision of an agrarian America.
Since
then, Louisiana has given us plenty, from oil to jazz to gumbo, not to mention
Louis Armstrong and Truman Capote. Louisiana arguably has very little to show
for it. At the very least, the sullying of its water is nothing new; in the
classic New Orleans novel A Confederacy of Dunces, written by John Kennedy
Toole in 1963, cantankerous antihero Ignatius Reilly muses that the Mississippi
River is “a treacherous and sinister body of water. I have never known anyone
who would even venture to stick his toe in its polluted brown waters, which
seethe with sewage, industrial waste, and deadly insecticides. Even the fish
are dying”.
Courreges
insists that his native state is better than that. Raised in Natchitoches
Parish, close to the Texas border (“The sticks,” he jokes), he left Louisiana
for the navy, eventually returning to work as a journalist before joining one
of the state’s most maligned agencies.
While
avowing “utmost respect” for vociferous critics like Honoré, he says they are
unwilling to acknowledge how much has changed in Louisiana, as evidenced in the
lack of leniency supposedly shown to Texas Brine. “We have the same goals as
they do,” Courreges says of the environmentalists. “We live here too.”
Some
can bear it no longer. After almost three decades, Clarence and Susie Hernandez
are finally leaving Bayou Corne. The movers came on his 83rd birthday, and
emptied the house he built with his own hands. Susie is also 83, though the
bright purple of her LSU T-shirt subtracts a good decade. “We didn’t think we’d
ever have to leave,” she says of the 28 years she and her husband have spent
here. Now, having settled with Texas Brine, they will go elsewhere.
“This
a bump in the road,” Susie says. “We’re gonna get past it. It’ll be hard, but
we will.”
Most
everyone admits that it is impossible to predict what the sinkhole will do. It
might grow at a leisurely pace, or it might be waiting to spew untold volumes
of gas and oil in a volcano of noxious slime.
That’s
why, maybe, it is best to get as far away from it as possible. Science can
offer reassurances, but it cannot quell the animal terror of being eaten by the
ground we stand on.
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