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The Commerce City, Colorado refinery notably exceeded emissions standards for sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxide.
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Canadian oil company Suncor will have to pay a $10.5 million fine to Colorado because its Commerce City refinery, near Denver, exceeded US state air pollution standards between 2019 and 2021.
Suncor notably exceeded the emission standards for sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxide, as well as the concentration limits for sulfur dioxide hydrogen.
In a press release, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment said this was the largest penalty financial award given to only one installation in state history.
The majority of the amount will go to projects that Suncor must carry out to minimize excessive air pollution. About $1.3 million will go to communities participating in the state's Environmental Justice Grant Program.
Communities who live and work near Suncor have suffered the unfair consequences of air pollution from the refinery's permit violations for too long, the department's health and environmental protection director wrote. Trisha Oeth.
The oil company will also have to double the number of air quality monitoring stations near its installations.
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Commerce City facilities refine about 98,000 barrels of oil per day, to produce gasoline, diesel and jet fuel, as well as asphalt.
With information from La Canadian Press
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