NEW YORK — At least two major oil companies said late Wednesday they have agreed to settle lawsuits over the use of the gasoline additive MTBE, a potential carcinogen that has been found in drinking water.
Representatives of Valero Energy Corp. and Chevron Corp. said they had joined the settlement, although a number of other oil companies also are named in a memo supporting the deal that was obtained by The Associated Press.
The companies confirmed their involvement after The Wall Street Journal reported on its website that several oil companies agreed to pay $423 million plus cleanup costs to settle groundwater-contamination litigation involving 153 public water providers in 17 states. That would make it the largest settlement to date involving MTBE, or methyl tertiary butyl ether.
Valero’s agreement “resolves many of the lawsuits” filed against the oil refiner over its prior use of the gasoline additive, company spokesman Bill Day said in a brief statement to AP.
He said the “settlement agreement is being reviewed by the court and is not yet final.” He did not provide details of the agreement and declined to name other companies involved in it.
According to The Journal, the other defendants settling included BP PLC’s BP America Inc., ConocoPhillips, Royal Dutch Shell PLC’s Shell Oil Co., Marathon Oil Corp., Petroleos de Venezuela SA’s Citgo Petroleum Corp. and Sunoco Inc.
Those companies were among those listed in the court document obtained by AP. Messages left with the companies seeking comment were not immediately returned.
At least six companies declined to settle, the largest being Exxon Mobil Corp., The Journal said.
Each company’s contribution to the settlement was undisclosed, as was the potential cleanup cost.



