Poison For Profit: HF Sinclair’s Refinery Caught Spewing Carcinogens in New Mexico
The air in Artesia, New Mexico, carries a story of corporate neglect. A legal complaint filed by the United States and the New Mexico Environment Department alleges that HF Sinclair Navajo Refining LLC has been illegally poisoning that air for years. The refinery, a massive industrial complex, is accused of pumping out a cocktail of dangerous chemicals including benzene, a substance known to cause cancer. This is not a simple mistake. It is an alleged pattern of behavior from a company that was already under federal orders to clean up its act more than two decades ago.
The Non-Financial Ledger
Forget stock prices and profit margins for a moment. Let’s talk about the real balance sheet: the one that measures human well-being against corporate greed. The government’s case paints a picture of a community betrayed. Imagine living near a facility whose own fenceline monitors are screaming a warning, detecting high levels of a carcinogen in the very air your family breathes. The complaint details how regulators, armed with infrared cameras, saw what was meant to stay hidden: uncontrolled emissions of hydrocarbons leaking from tanks and wastewater systems.
This isn’t just about regulatory paperwork. It’s about the erosion of trust and the theft of peace of mind. Every unexplained illness, every respiratory problem, every fear for a child’s future becomes tainted by the question: was it the refinery? HF Sinclair’s alleged failure to control its pollution imposes an invisible tax on the people of Artesia, paid not in dollars, but in anxiety and potential sickness.
Legal Receipts: The Government’s Case
The language of legal documents is often dry, but the facts they contain are devastating. The complaint against HF Sinclair is a systematic takedown of the company’s alleged safety failures. Here is what the government put on the record.
“Defendant’s failure to comply with the applicable requirements… has resulted in unlawful emissions of VOCs, a precursor to ground-level ozone (often referred to as ‘smog’), sulfur dioxide (SO2), a contributor to acid rain and a lung irritant, as well as benzene, a carcinogenic hazardous air pollutant.”
“In July 2019, EPA began investigating the cause of high benzene levels reported from the Artesia Refinery’s facility property boundary monitoring program (‘fenceline monitoring’ or ‘FLM’)…”
“From June 6-7, 2023, EPA and NMED conducted a follow-up site visit and observed significant and ongoing noncompliance at the Artesia Refinery’s WWTS equipment.”
Societal Impact Mapping
A corporation’s decisions in a boardroom in Delaware have real, physical consequences for families in New Mexico. The alleged violations by HF Sinclair are a direct threat across multiple fronts.
Public Health Assault
The chemicals listed in the complaint are not benign. Benzene is a confirmed carcinogen. Sulfur Dioxide irritates the respiratory system and contributes to conditions like asthma. VOCs create the smog that blankets cities, leading to widespread breathing difficulties. This is a public health crisis manufactured for profit.
Environmental Degradation
The damage extends beyond human lungs. SO2 emissions lead to acid rain, which poisons soil and water, harming local ecosystems. Ozone created by VOCs damages crops and forests. The refinery’s pollution is a direct attack on the land and water that sustain the community.
Economic Inequality
HF Sinclair reaps the financial rewards from its refinery operations. The community of Artesia bears the costs. They pay through higher medical bills, diminished property values, and the loss of a clean environment. This is a classic case of privatizing profits while socializing the risks and damages.
The Metric of Broken Promises
The source document doesn’t give us a dollar figure for the profits HF Sinclair made while allegedly violating the law. But it gives us a more damning number: the measure of their repeated failure to protect the public.
What Now? The Watchlist and The Resistance
A lawsuit is a start, not an end. Justice for the people of Artesia requires sustained pressure and vigilance. The system that allowed this to happen is still in place. It is up to us to watch them.
Corporate Watchlist
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HF Sinclair Navajo Refining LLC
The operator on the ground. Their permits, emissions data, and compliance reports must be publicly scrutinized.
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HF Sinclair Corporation
The parent company. The corporate leadership and Board of Directors are ultimately responsible for the actions of their subsidiaries.
Regulatory Watchlist
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Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Will they secure meaningful penalties that deter future pollution, or will this end in another weak settlement?
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New Mexico Environment Department (NMED)
As the local regulator, they are the first line of defense. Their enforcement actions and permitting decisions for this facility demand close public monitoring.
The Resistance
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Support Local Organizing
Find and support environmental justice groups in New Mexico fighting industrial pollution. They are the true watchdogs.
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Demand Accountability
Contact your representatives and regulatory agencies. Demand the strongest possible enforcement against corporate polluters and an end to repeat offenses.
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Practice Mutual Aid
Corporate pollution disproportionately harms working-class communities. Support local mutual aid networks that provide direct support to those affected by health and economic crises.
💡 Explore Corporate Misconduct by Category
Corporations harm people every day — from wage theft to pollution. Learn more by exploring key areas of injustice.
- 💀 Product Safety Violations — When companies risk lives for profit.
- 🌿 Environmental Violations — Pollution, ecological collapse, and unchecked greed.
- 💼 Labor Exploitation — Wage theft, worker abuse, and unsafe conditions.
- 🛡️ Data Breaches & Privacy Abuses — Misuse and mishandling of personal information.
- 💵 Financial Fraud & Corruption — Lies, scams, and executive impunity.