As Hurricane Laura batters Louisiana, massive chemical leak spews toxic smoke near Lake Charles

“We knew this would happen. Lake Charles and Cameron Parish are petrochemical industry epicenters. The plants, export terminals, refineries, oil tank farms are ticking time bombs every hurricane season.”

by Jake Johnson, staff writer

Thursday, August 27

The chemical leak broke out near Lake Charles, Louisiana after Hurricane Laura tore through the area on Thursday, August 27, 2020. (Photo: RadarOmega/Twitter Screengrab)
The chemical leak broke out near Lake Charles, Louisiana after Hurricane Laura tore through the area on Thursday, August 27, 2020. (Photo: RadarOmega/Twitter Screengrab)

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After Hurricane Laura tore through the area Thursday morning, a chemical leak broke out at a plant near Lake Charles, Louisiana, leading authorities to warn residents against traveling through the affected region as dark smoke flowed out of an industrial building and over Interstate 10.

The local Daily Advertiser reported that a “possible chlorine leak” caused a fire at an industrial plant but authorities have not yet confirmed any details of the incident, which comes after activists warned of the “environmental nightmare” that could result from the hurricane slamming a region with a high concentration of chemical and fossil fuel plants and infrastructure.

“Facilities like this have been poisoning Gulf communities for decades,” tweeted environmentalist Rob Friedman. “During and after storms, who knows how much toxic pollution they’re emitting.”

“We knew this would happen,” said another activist. “Lake Charles and Cameron Parish are petrochemical industry epicenters. The plants, export terminals, refineries, oil tank farms are ticking time bombs every hurricane season. Industry only sees money, not environmental impact, and our leaders are in their pockets.”

Images and videos of the leak circulated widely on social media:


This article published by Common Dreams on August 27, 2020, here…

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