W.Va. Chemical Valley Featured In Film Documentaries

West Virginia’s community of Institute is featured in two documentaries that examine environmental safety and accountability. Both films will be screened outdoors on Thursday, Oct. 5 at Institute's Shawnee Regional Park.

West Virginia’s community of Institute is featured in two documentaries that examine environmental safety and accountability.

The mini-documentaries are part of the series “Films for Our Future” and are hosted by Our Future West Virginia and the North Carolina production company, Working Films.

Chemical Valley follows the community of Institute in Kanawha County and explores the conflict of an economy dependent on chemical plants.

Out of Air examines what happens when environmental resources are turned into a commodity and ultimately who benefits.

Kathy Ferguson, interim executive director of Our Future West Virginia, said the movies underscore how communities of color and lower wealth are disproportionately impacted by environmental injustices.

She said Chemical Valley highlights the conflict and struggles of economies that rely on jobs from plants that produce chemical emissions like ethylene oxide.

“It’s just a new chemical,” Ferguson said. “I like to refer to it as the chemical du jour that we’re having to suffer and struggle with, and how we can stop these things from happening.”

According to the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection, Union Carbide and Specialty Products have emitted ethylene oxide at sites near Institute and South Charleston.

The federal Environmental Protection Agency’s 2018 National Air Toxics Assessment data revealed that six of 90 census tracts with the highest cancer risk from the chemical were in Kanawha County.

Ferguson said Out of Air explores what can happen in the future if toxic air pollution is not stopped by transitioning away from petrochemical industries and reducing the carbon footprint.

She said filmmaker Jessie B. Evans and his futuristic sci-fi short film captures the impact of past tragic incidents and the future of chemical emissions like ethylene oxide in the valley.

Both films will be screened outdoors on Thursday, Oct. 5 at Institute’s Shawnee Regional Park.

Chemical Valley will be shown again at Floralee Hark Cohen Cinema in Charleston on Oct. 10, 17 and 24.

Cancer Causing Chemical Subject Of Kanawha Co. Public Hearing

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) will hold its second in-person meeting this Thursday, Aug. 18, to discuss ethylene oxide emissions in western Kanawha County.

Updated on Aug. 16, 2022 at 11 a.m.

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) will hold its second, in-person meeting this Thursday, Aug. 18, to discuss ethylene oxide emissions in western Kanawha County.

The chemical has been classified as a carcinogen by federal regulators, raising concerns about the heightened risk of cancer to local residents.

During a four part sampling project of atmospheric levels of the chemical over a period of several months earlier this year, the highest concentrations of ethylene oxide were found near Institute.

The DEP says Union Carbide and Specialty Products have emitted ethylene oxide at sites near Institute and South Charleston.

Data from the Environmental Protection Agency’s 2018 National Air Toxics Assessment
revealed six of 90 census tracts with the highest cancer risk from the chemical were in Kanawha County.

The Aug. 18 meeting will be held at the Schoenbaum Center in Charleston from 6 to 8 p.m.

**Editor’s Note: A previous version of this story incorrectly stated the public hearing would be held Aug. 16. The correct date is Thursday, Aug. 18 at 6 p.m.

Cracker Plant Construction Slated for Southwestern Pa.

West Virginia was in the running for construction of a new ethane cracker plant, but after four years of deliberations, a major petrochemical company announced Tuesday they are moving forward with construction in Pennsylvania.

Shell Chemicals, the same company that owns Shell gasoline stations across the country, just announced it would construct the petrochemicals complex in Potter Township, about 30-miles northwest of Pittsburgh.

In 2012, Shell began exploring the possibility of constructing the plant in Pennsylvania, Ohio, or West Virginia.

The complex will contain an ethylene cracker. These facilities break components of natural gas into feedstock for anything from food packaging to car parts.

Construction on the cracker plant is estimated to begin in 18 months, bringing 6,000 construction jobs to the area with 600 permanent jobs once it’s complete.

In a press release, Shell said the cracker will be supplied with natural gas from both the Utica and Marcellus shale plays,  meaning as pipelines are constructed, West Virginia natural gas could find its way to the site.

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