As a black cloud of burning asphalt rose over Superior during the April 2018 oil refinery fire, nearly 100 tons of greenhouse gases rose with it.
To make up for those emissions, Husky Energy will install a solar array at the University of Wisconsin-Superior and help residents swap out old wood-burning appliances.
That's the prescription outlined in a proposed settlement with the federal government and state of Wisconsin filed in federal court last week. The settlement is an amendment to one reached in a 2011 court case addressing violations of the Clean Air Act at the refinery.
A federal judge in Madison will decide whether to approve the settlement.
As part of the active $400 million rebuild of the fire-damaged refinery, the settlement also requires Husky to install additional safeguards around its hydrogen fluoride unit. The risk of a hydrogen fluoride (HF) release — though one did not happen — was the basis for the near-total evacuation of Superior as firefighters battled the April 26, 2018, fire.
The refinery is expected to reopen next year, and "rebuild costs are expected to be substantially covered by property damage insurance," the company said in its earnings report Thursday.
Here are some of the key points outlined in the settlement:
Hydrogen fluoride