Intel Violated Federal Air Pollution Law at Oregon Chip Plants for Years
The EPA caught Intel breaking hazardous air pollutant standards at two semiconductor facilities near Portland. Residents breathed the consequences while Intel paid a fraction of what it earns in seconds.
Intel Corporation violated the EPA’s National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants at its Hillsboro and Aloha, Oregon semiconductor campuses. The violations specifically targeted rules governing stationary internal combustion engines, which are regulated because they emit toxic air pollutants that harm the lungs, hearts, and lives of people living nearby. Intel neither admitted nor denied the allegations but agreed to pay a $39,187 fine to settle the case.
Communities in Washington County, Oregon bear the environmental burden of hosting one of the world’s largest chip manufacturers. A penalty that amounts to rounding-error money for a corporation of Intel’s size sends a clear message: breaking air quality law is cheaper than following it.
The people of Hillsboro and Aloha deserve clean air, not legal settlements that let polluters off the hook. Demand stronger enforcement and meaningful penalties for corporate air pollution violations.
| 01 | Intel violated the EPA’s National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) for Stationary Reciprocating Internal Combustion Engines at its Oregon facilities. | high |
| 02 | The violations occurred at two separate Intel campuses: one in Hillsboro, Oregon, and one in Aloha, Oregon, both located in the densely populated Washington County area near Portland. | high |
| 03 | The NESHAP rules Intel broke govern stationary engines because those engines emit hazardous air pollutants including carbon monoxide, formaldehyde, and other toxic compounds linked to respiratory and cardiovascular disease. | high |
| 04 | EPA Region 10, which covers the Pacific Northwest, issued a formal docket and initiated enforcement proceedings against Intel under Section 113 of the Clean Air Act. | med |
| 05 | Intel signed the settlement agreement on February 18, 2026, through Vice President Jim Evers, representing the company’s Front-End Facilities Engineering and Operations division. | low |
| 01 | Intel neither admitted nor denied the specific factual allegations in the settlement, meaning the company faces no legal record of wrongdoing despite confirmed violations. | high |
| 02 | The $39,187 penalty is a fraction of the $59,114-per-day maximum the law allows, and represents a negligible cost for a corporation that generates billions in annual revenue. | high |
| 03 | No individual executives face personal liability, fines, or any accountability under the settlement agreement. | high |
| 04 | The EPA explicitly states in the Final Order that the penalty is not tax-deductible, but this provision only matters if the penalty amount is large enough to deter future violations; $39,187 is not. | med |
| 01 | Hillsboro and Aloha are residential communities with tens of thousands of residents living in proximity to Intel’s manufacturing campuses, meaning violations directly affected the air quality of neighborhoods, homes, and schools. | high |
| 02 | Stationary internal combustion engines that violate NESHAP standards emit hazardous pollutants known to cause asthma, lung disease, heart disease, and elevated cancer risk in exposed populations. | high |
| 03 | Washington County, Oregon already bears a disproportionate industrial pollution burden as the home of Intel’s largest U.S. manufacturing operations. Regulatory violations compound that burden. | med |
| 04 | Intel certified that violations were corrected only after the EPA initiated enforcement, meaning the community was exposed to noncompliant air emissions for an unspecified period before the company acted. | med |
| 01 | Intel self-reported or was found in violation through EPA monitoring, yet the enforcement response was an expedited administrative settlement rather than full adversarial proceedings, limiting public scrutiny. | med |
| 02 | The settlement explicitly waives Intel’s right to contest the allegations or appeal the Final Order, but this waiver is meaningless when the penalty is too small to motivate a legal challenge in the first place. | med |
| 03 | The Clean Air Act empowers the EPA to pursue criminal sanctions and injunctive relief beyond administrative penalties, but the Final Order confirms the EPA pursued only a civil administrative penalty in this case. | med |
| 01 | Environmental enforcement against major corporations routinely results in penalties that cost less than legal compliance, creating a financial incentive to violate rather than prevent violations. | high |
| 02 | Intel’s Oregon operations are deeply embedded in the regional economy, giving the company structural leverage that shapes how aggressively regulators pursue enforcement. | med |
| 03 | Communities near industrial facilities are routinely expected to absorb the health and environmental costs of corporate operations, with no direct compensation from settlement penalties that flow to the federal government instead. | high |
“Respondent neither admits nor denies the specific factual allegations contained in this ESA.”
“Under Section 113(d)(1) of the CAA, 42 U.S.C. § 7413(d)(1), and 40 C.F.R. Part 19, the EPA may assess a civil penalty of not more than $59,114 per day of violation.”
“Respondent certifies that, as of the date of Respondent’s signature of this ESA, Respondent has corrected the violation(s) alleged in Part III and in the Summary.”
“The Assessed Penalty…represents an administrative civil penalty assessed by the EPA and shall not be deductible for purposes of federal taxes.”
“Respondent expressly waives any affirmative defenses and the right to contest the allegations contained in this ESA and to appeal the Final Order.”
“Nothing in this Final Order shall affect the right of the EPA or the United States to pursue appropriate injunctive or other equitable relief or criminal sanctions for any violations of law.”
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