CSB Report Reveals How Misidentified Piping Led to Fatal H2S Release at Texas Refinery
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CSB Report Reveals How Misidentified Piping Led to Fatal H2S Release at Texas Refinery
What Happened
On October 10, 2024, contract workers from Repcon, Inc. were performing maintenance in the Amine Unit at the PEMEX Deer Park refinery in Deer Park, Texas. They mistakenly opened a flange on piping containing pressurized hydrogen sulfide instead of the correct flange located roughly five feet away. One worker died immediately from exposure. The toxic cloud drifted downwind into an adjacent unit, killing a second contractor from ISC.
The release continued for nearly one hour before emergency responders sealed the flange. Shelter-in-place orders were issued for both Deer Park and Pasadena, Texas.
Why It Matters
The CSB investigation identified a chain of systemic failures that chemical facilities and contract workers everywhere should study. The core problem: workers could not positively identify the correct piece of equipment before opening a pressurized line. Drawings and flange lists did not distinguish between nearly identical piping segments, and the identification tag on the correct flange was out of the workers' line of sight.
Work permits were too broad, covering multiple jobs without clear hold points. Workers assigned to a partially operational unit believed they were working in a fully shutdown environment. Written procedures and actual shop-floor practices had diverged, and management personnel either misunderstood or deviated from established protocols.
Key Details
- 2 fatalities (contract workers from Repcon, Inc. and ISC)
- 13 people transported to medical facilities
- Dozens more treated at the scene
- 27,000+ pounds of hydrogen sulfide released
- $12.3 million in property damage
- Shelter-in-place orders issued for surrounding communities
What to Watch
The CSB recommended that PEMEX Deer Park label all relevant piping per ANSI/ASME A13.1 standards, inform workers reassigned to partially operational units of all active hazards and safeguards, and establish a comprehensive conduct-of-operations system with enforceable metrics and audits.
The CSB also recommended that ASME develop written guidelines for standard equipment marking practices before opening process piping. If adopted, those guidelines could eventually ripple across the refining and chemical processing industry as a new baseline for equipment identification.
Facilities that handle hydrogen sulfide or other highly toxic gases should review their own equipment labeling, work-permit scope, and contractor onboarding processes against the findings in this report. The full CSB investigation report is available on the CSB website.
Alliance's Take
This incident underscores why chemical documentation and proper labeling are not bureaucratic extras—they are life-safety requirements. Every container, pipe segment, and storage vessel in a facility should carry clear identification that matches its Safety Data Sheet. At Alliance Chemical, every product we ship comes with a current SDS and Certificate of Analysis (COA), because accurate documentation is the first line of defense against misidentification incidents.
If your facility handles hydrogen sulfide, sulfuric acid, or other high-hazard chemicals, make sure your receiving, storage, and maintenance teams can identify every line and vessel in the field—not just on paper. Reach out to our team at sales@alliancechemical.com if you need updated SDS documentation or guidance on chemical compatibility for your operations.
Browse our full catalog of laboratory chemicals and industrial acids, all backed by Alliance's documentation guarantee.
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