Everyone is welcome to the free talk and Q&A: 
6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 25, in Kilworth Memorial Chapel

TACOMA, Wash. – The controversial proposal to build the world’s largest methanol plant on Tacoma’s Tideflats will be critiqued at a free public presentation by environmental chemist and activist Wilma Subra.

Subra will give the talk “Environmental and Human Health Impacts of Methanol Plants,” starting at 6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 25, in Kilworth Memorial Chapel, on campus. The talk and Q&A are sponsored by the university’s Sound Policy Institute and The Sierra Club’s Tatoosh Group of Pierce County. The Washington State Chapter of the Sierra Club is opposed to the methanol project.

“We hope to make this session on the proposed methanol plant an informative one and an opportunity for people in the community to get scientific answers to questions they may have,” said Daniel Sherman, director of the university’s Sound Policy Institute. “Wilma Subra is a respected environmental health evaluator, with broad experience in the field, and we welcome her observations and ideas.”

 

Subra, a MacArthur Genius Award winner, has been fighting for decades to protect the interests of Louisiana residents who live in an area dubbed “Cancer Alley,” along the Mississippi River. Clusters of cancer patients have been diagnosed in the region, with many blaming the nearby industrial plants.

In Tacoma, a Chinese-backed company called Northwest Innovation Works has proposed building a plant on the Port of Tacoma that would convert natural gas, delivered to the site by an underground pipe, into methanol. The flammable liquid would be taken by tanker ship to a plant in China to make a plastic-like substance for products such as cellphones, furniture, and carpet.

The Tacoma area residents have already attended one packed hearing held by city officials to disseminate information about the methanol plant plans. Opponents fear the plant could affect air and water quality or lead to a dangerous explosion. Some union members, who expect 1,000 construction jobs and 260 permanent jobs, have backed the proposal. The Port of Tacoma agreed to lease the waterfront property in 2014, and the plan is currently undergoing environmental studies.

Wilma Subra is the founder of Subra Company, a chemistry laboratory and environmental consulting firm in Louisiana. The company works with community groups, providing technical research and evaluation of projects that could lead to environmental health concerns. Subra and residents fought and successfully closed an oil waste incinerator in Louisiana using hazardous waste as fuel. She has provided technical assistance to communities near the polluted Hunters Point Shipyard in San Francisco and others living near the Port of New Orleans, where Italian nuclear waste was imported.

Subra has served on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) National Advisory Council for Environmental Policy and Technology; on the National Advisory Committee of the U.S. Representative to the North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation; and on the EPA National Environmental Justice Advisory Council. In 2011 she won the Global Exchange Human Rights Award for her work with the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and its communities. Subra appeared in the 2010 documentary Gasland, which focuses on U.S. communities affected by oil and gas fracking.

The Sound Policy Institute at the University of Puget Sound aims to educate and empower individuals on campus and regionally to effectively protect their own communities against environmental threats and create a sustainable environment for future generations.  

For directions and a map of the University of Puget Sound campus:pugetsound.edu/directions
For accessibility information, please contact accessibility@pugetsound.edu or 253.879.3236, or visit pugetsound.edu/accessibility.

Press photos of Wilma Subra are available upon request.
Photos on page: From top right: Port of Tacoma aerial, by D. Coetzee; Wilma Subra

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