Water regulators sue 18 companies
- Share via
Jenny Marder
Orange County Water regulators have filed a lawsuit against 18
companies they say are responsible for a gasoline additive that has
been found in a groundwater well and they fear could contaminate the
county’s drinking water supply.
Methyl tertiary-butyl ether has been detected in low levels in the
Orange County Water District’s shallow aquifers. District officials
suspect the carcinogen may have leaked into the groundwater supply
from storage tanks in gas stations. They fear the chemical may spread
from the one well to the others, contaminating the county’s water
supply.
The chance that Huntington Beach residents will unknowingly drink
water contaminated by the gasoline additive is slim because just a
small amount can make the water taste and smell like turpentine, said
Ron Wildermuth, communications director at the water district.
The risk of it seeping into the drinking water supply, however, is
very real, he said.
“The situation is this: The water district and water users did not
put MTBE in our shallow aquifer zone, the oil companies did, and we
feel that they’re responsible,” Wildermuth said.
The chemical was originally used in gasoline in the 1980s as a
substitute for lead, and later as an oxygenate to help the gasoline
burn cleaner and thus improve air quality. It moves quickly through
groundwater and doesn’t biodegrade. Just a drop can make the water
taste and smell foul.
“It’s one of the worst contaminants you can have,” Wildermuth
said. “As long as contamination is there and not being removed,
that’s a horrible risk.”
Defendants in the suit include the manufacturers, designers,
distributors, suppliers and retailers of MTBE and another contaminant
called tertiary-butyl alcohol, which the district alleges is
polluting the basin. The water district is demanding that the
companies cover all costs of investigation, monitoring and cleanup.
“We have not seen a copy of the lawsuit, so it would be premature
for us to comment on the allegations contained in the lawsuit,” said
Santana Gonzalez, a spokesman for Chevron Texaco, one of the
defendants named in the complaint, filed on May 6. “But as a company,
we work closely with the regional water quality boards to assure that
our retail facilities do not pose a risk to drinking water sources
throughout the region.”
Other defendants are Unocal Corp., ConocoPhillips, Chevron USA
Inc, Shell Oil Company, Exxon Mobil Corp. and 7-Eleven Inc.
It could take many years and millions of dollars to clean up the
contaminant, Wildermuth said.
“The goal is to make sure that neither the district nor the
drinking public ends up paying for cost of providing safe and clean
drinking water,” said Victor Sher, the attorney representing the
Orange County Water District.
Sher also represents the City of Santa Monica in a similar lawsuit
and was a member of a trial team in a South Tahoe case that involved
12 contaminated wells.
“Among other things, the defendants knowingly and willfully
promoted and marketed gasoline containing MTBE and [tertiary-butyl
alcohol], when they knew, or reasonably should have known, that these
compounds would reach groundwater, pollute public water supplies,
render drinking water unusable and unsafe and threaten public health
and welfare,” the district claims in its suit.
The health risk of the additive in drinking water is minimal
because the taste is so potent it is easily detected, Wildermuth
said.
At three to five parts per billion, an amount comparable to a
pinch of salt in 10 tons of potato chips, the taste and smell is too
strong to drink, he said. At 13 parts per billion, it becomes a
health risk.
“What we’re concerned about is it getting from the shallow
aquifers into deeper aquifers and destroying water for use as
drinking water,” he said. “Once it’s in the groundwater, there’s not
much that can be done.”
The Orange County Water District provides drinking water to 2.3
million residents in 21 cities in north and central Orange County,
including Huntington Beach.
“It’s a very strong case, and we hope that the companies will do
the responsible thing and resolve it early,” Sher said. “If not,
we’re prepared to try the case to a jury.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.