Two arrested in Texas protesting Dow Chemical

Activist Diane Wilson, executive director of San Antonio Bay Estuarine Waterkeeper (SABEW), was arrested while attempting to hand-deliver her list of demands to Dow Chemical in Seadrift, Texas. She was charged with criminal trespass and released from the Calhoun County Jail after midnight. At the time of her arrest on March 26, she was more than three weeks into an open-ended hunger strike demanding that Dow rescind their permit applications to legalize plastic pollution and build four experimental nuclear reactors at the facility in Seadrift. 
On the same day, fellow SABEW organizer Dan Lê was arrested while disrupting Dow CEO Jim Fitterling’s speech at CERAWeek by S&P Global – a gigantic oil and gas conference hosted annually in Houston, Texas.

Two Arrests in Texas for Peaceful Protest Against Dow Chemical; Public Meeting Announced for Dow’s Water Discharge Permit

77-Year-Old Wilson arrested while attempting to deliver a letter at the Dow Chemical plastics plant in Seadrift, and Dan Lê arrested while disrupting Dow CEO’s keynote remarks at the CERAWeek conference in Houston

HOUSTON, TX – Fourth-generation Texas shrimper and Goldman Prize Winner Diane Wilson was arrested on the morning of March 26 at Dow Chemical’s Seadrift manufacturing facility, on the 25th day of her ongoing hunger strike, to protest the company’s egregious environmental harms to San Antonio Bay and the surrounding community.

“I’ve watched these waters my entire life. I’ve watched the plastic pour into them. Now, Dow wants a permit to keep on doing it – but much more than before. They want to legalize plastic pollution. I’m not going to eat until they stop,” said Wilson, who is the Executive Director of San Antonio Bay Estuarine Waterkeeper (SABEW). “This bay belongs to the people of Texas, not to Dow Chemical.” 

Wilson was attempting to hand-deliver a formal demand letter (which has been signed by more than fifty organizations) to the chemical facility’s site director for him to then forward to Dow CEO Jim Fitterling. This is the second time Wilson has tried to deliver the letter in person, following an earlier attempt on March 10th together with her colleague Dan Lê. Wilson also mailed the letter to Dow’s headquarters in Midland, Michigan, and has continued her hunger strike for weeks, yet SABEW has received no response from Dow. 

When ordered to leave the property by Dow security today, Wilson refused to do so until she could give the letter directly to the site director, at which point sheriff’s officers arrived to arrest her. 

Wilson is demanding that Dow:

  1. Commit to zero discharge of plastic pellets, powder, and flakes from its Seadrift facility and incorporate that commitment into its operating permit; and
  2. Cancel all plans to build nuclear reactors at the site and withdraw its construction permit application from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. 

Wilson has said that she will not end her hunger strike until both demands are met. She plans to continue her hunger strike while in the Calhoun County Jail. 

Activist Dan Lê disrupts Dow CEO Fitterling’s panel at CERAWeek in Houston

Separately, in Houston, fellow SABEW organizer Dan Lê disrupted Dow CEO Jim Fitterling’s speech at the plenary session of CERAWeek – an oil and gas conference hosted by S&P Global, which has been called the “Superbowl of the energy industry.” Though hailed by S&P Global as “a leading voice in sustainability,” Fitterling has overseen Dow as it continues to expand petrochemical operations in Texas and elsewhere, while simultaneously advocating for false solutions that do not address the root causes of these interconnected environmental and public health crises.

Neither Fitterling nor any Dow representatives have responded to SABEW’s letter regarding the plastic pellet pollution and the proposed nuclear reactors.

“Jim Fitterling, why do you not answer our message from Diane Wilson?” asked Lê during the CEO’s plenary session at CERAWeek. “She’s out there in front of Dow waiting for a response for your plastic pollution.”

“When a 77-year-old woman from this community puts her life on the line outside your front gate and you don’t even respond, that tells you everything you need to know about how Dow sees people in the community,” Lê added. “It’s like we don’t exist. So we have to make ourselves seen and heard.”

Public Meeting Announced Regarding Dow’s Water Discharge Permit

Dow’s Seadrift facility manufactures pre-production plastic pellets called “nurdles,” a raw material used in the production of plastic consumer goods. The facility’s existing state permit allows for the discharge of no more than “trace amounts” of “floating solids.” Despite this limit, SABEW waterkeepers have observed and collected millions of nurdles in and along local waterways around the facility on a near-constant basis. On a single day, SABEW collected millions of pellets in one spot in the Victoria Barge Canal which flows into San Antonio Bay.

Rather than upgrade its pollution controls to comply with its existing permit, Dow has asked the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to rewrite the rules, arguing that “trace amounts” is too vague and that Dow should instead be explicitly permitted to discharge plastics into the bay. Dow proposed no replacement limit. If granted, the permit would be the first of its kind.

An estimated one billion pounds of nurdles enter the world’s oceans each year.

In response to over 200 requests for a public meeting, the TCEQ has finally announced that they will schedule a public meeting regarding Dow’s application for a water discharge permit. The application is currently in technical review and the public meeting will be scheduled when a draft permit has been prepared. Activity related to the application may be found here, and the pending wastewater application and available notices may be found here

SABEW is urging community members in the area to attend the meeting and raise concerns about Dow’s rampant water pollution, and to encourage the TCEQ not to approve the new permit application, which would have disastrous implications for the regulation of plastic pollution into waterways and the residents who rely on them.

Dow’s permit amendment is not the only plan the company is advancing at the Seadrift site. The company is also seeking permits to build four nuclear reactors on the same site through its subsidiary, Long Mott Energy LLC, using a reactor design with no conventional steel-reinforced concrete containment structure, unlike every existing U.S. nuclear plant. The reactors would generate high-level nuclear waste to be stored on-site at the Seadrift facility indefinitely.

Background

On December 17, 2025, Earthjustice and Environmental Integrity Project, on behalf of SABEW, issued a Notice of Intent to Sue Dow under the Clean Water Act’s citizen suit provision, which allows the public to take legal action when regulators fail to enforce the law. On February 13, 2026 – one business day before SABEW’s planned federal filing – the State of Texas filed its own lawsuit against Dow, citing “habitual” illegal water pollution violations. Under the Clean Water Act, a state lawsuit can block a citizen suit, even if the state’s action seeks weaker penalties. SABEW believes the timing was not coincidental.

Perales, Allmon & Ice, PC, an Austin law firm, is representing SABEW and has successfully intervened before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, challenging Dow’s pending construction permit application.

Additional Quotes:

“As a fellow Coastal Bend resident who is tired of having their community taken over and ravaged by uncaring, polluting corporations and has also engaged in civil disobedience, I stand in resolute solidarity with Diane Wilson. Diane has demonstrated for decades now that she is willing to put her body on the line to stop the worst of harms committed by Formosa, Exxon, and now Dow. Her selfless actions throughout the years have made it more possible for the plight and resistance of other Gulf South communities to be seen and receive support. We owe her an immense debt of gratitude and publicly pledging our support for this hunger strike is the least we can do.” – Chloe Torres, Texas Campaign for the Environment Coastal Bend Regional Coordinator

xxx
March 9, 2026
 
Jim Fitterling, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, Dow
c/o Thomas Welch, Interim Site Director
Union Carbide Corporation
A Subsidiary of the Dow Chemical Corporation
7501 State Highway 185 North
North Seadrift, TX 77983
 
Dear Mr. Fitterling,
 
My name is Diane Wilson. I’m a fourth-generation fisherwoman and have lived my
entire life in Seadrift, Texas, a fishing town that is approximately eight miles from your
Dow, Seadrift plant. I am also Executive Director of the nonprofit environmental group,
San Antonio Bay Estuarine Waterkeeper (SABEW).
 
I am deeply distressed by the current and proposed hazardous, radioactive and plastic
pollution threats to the Bay from Dow and am embarking on a Hunger Strike and
Encampment to call for a cease to these emissions and plans for more. Violating the
Clean Water Act and using the region as a guinea pig for dangerous nuclear reactors
are completely unacceptable.
 
On December 17, 2025, SABEW sent Dow a Notice of Intent to Sue for violations of the
Clean Water Act at the Seadrift Operations Facility located at 7762 Highway 185,
Seadrift, TX 77983 by Union Carbide Corporation; Dow Hydrocarbons and Resources
LLC; and Braskem America, Inc. On February 13, 2026, several days before we could
have filed our Clean Water Suit, the State of Texas sued Dow, alleging years of habitual
water pollution violations involving plastic pellets at its Seadrift complex. The state’s
lawsuit has moved the fight against Dow’s plastic pollution into the state courts.
 
On January 4, 2026, Dow and its subsidiary, Union Carbide, requested a change to its
wastewater permit in a 320-page application. This was three weeks after SABEW
announced plans to sue Dow over unpermitted plastic pollution.
 
Dow/UCC’s latest application request sought, among other things, to loosen standard
language that limited “floating solids” to “trace amounts” in chemical plant wastewater.
 
Dow said that that language in the existing permit is vague and has the potential to be
more stringent than necessary. It didn’t specify a new limit but said “proposed language
will be forthcoming.”
 
Quite frankly, this is astonishing language from Dow given that for over a year we have
found and observed untold quantities of plastic pellets and powder being discharged
into the Victoria Barge Canal, receiving waters and lands surrounding Dow/Union
Carbide, much more beyond what could be considered trace amounts. For example,
one sample was collected in the Victoria Barge Canal on September 16, 2025, and
weighed 13.3 pounds. That equates to approximately 290,400 pellets. And that is not
the largest sample we have collected. A sample collected on December 31, 2025,
weighed 107 pounds and had over 2 million pellets.
 
Another concern: on March 31,2025 Dow’s wholly owned subsidiary, Long Mott Energy
L.L.C. applied to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission for a license to construct four
nuclear reactors at the Dow Union Carbide Seadrift site. They are a type of nuclear
reactor that has never been built in the US and is not licensed by the NRC. If built, the
nuclear reactors would lack the conventional concrete and steel containment structures
required at every existing U.S. nuclear plant to prevent dangerous radioactive release in
case of accidents, relying instead on an unproven “functional containment” approach
that has never been tested at commercial scale. Further, these reactors will routinely
emit radioactivity into our air and water with unknown risks given no commercial
precedent for this design. Then there is the concern of nuclear waste: there is currently
no licensed permanent repository for high-level nuclear waste anywhere in the United
States meaning the spent fuel will remain here in Seadrift. SABEW intervened and was
granted standing, but not all our objections were accepted for review. SABEW opposes
the economics, environmental and health dangers, pollution and long lasting deadly
radioactive waste that will forever threaten our communities, our water and air, our
lifestyles and economic survival.
 
In response to all these concerns that I feel will be devastating to our bays, fisheries,
marine life, and Seadrift fishing community, on March 2, 2026, I began a hunger strike
and 24/7 encampment near the entrance in the ditch of the Dow/Union Carbide Seadrift
facility. I have a tent and am camping out 24 hours, 7 days a week to impress upon
Dow/Union Carbide our intense dislike and frustration of decades of plastic pollution
being discharged into our bays and waterways. I am also in your ditch to express our
opposition to the recent wastewater application and the attempt to alter standard
language regarding “floating solids” and “trace amounts” that could allow even more
discharge of plastic solids. Given our opposition to the application, I am determined to
continue the hunger strike until the following demands are met:
 
1) Dow will write to TCEQ as part of the current Texas Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System permit renewal process to rescind the pending application
and replace it with a renewed TPDES permit application that will contain the
following requirements:
 
a) There will be zero (0) discharge of Plastics (pellets, powder, flakes) from
Dow’s Seadrift plant. Dow shall not propose the Plastics in its discharge in
any way are part of permitted total suspended solids.
 
b) Dow will provide SABEW a copy of the letter to TCEQ complying with this
term immediately after sending it. Dow will also provide SABEW copies of
any subsequent correspondence and notification of in person or oral
communications to or from TCEQ regarding these proposed permit terms
within five (5) days.
 
c) Regardless of whether TCEQ adopts these new permit terms proposed by
Dow, Dow agrees to comply with the paragraphs above.
 
2) A second demand to end this hunger strike and related to the above referenced
licensing of four high-temperature, gas cooled reactors at Dow’s proposed Long
Mott Generating Station, which DOE is supporting through its Advanced Reactor
Demonstration program:
 
a) Cancel all plans to build nuclear reactors at the Seadrift site and withdraw
from its partnership with X-Energy and the award from the U.S.
Department of Energy’s Advanced Reactor Demonstration Program.
 
b) Long Mott Energy, the partnership between Dow and X-Energy, will
withdraw its construction permit application pending before the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
 
I appreciate your consideration and quick response to this letter.
 
Sincerely,
 
Diane Wilson
Executive Director
San Antonio Bay Estuarine Waterkeeper
 
cc:
Jacqueline C. Hinman, Chair, EHS&T Committee, Dow
Wesley G. Bush, Member, EHS&T Committee, Dow
Debra L. Dial, Member, EHS&T Committee, Dow
Jerri DeVard, Member, EHS&T Committee, Dow
Luis Alberto Moreno, Member, EHS&T Committee, Dow
Jill S. Wyant, Member, EHS&T Committee, Dow
Denise DeLaune, VP Operations, U.S. Gulf Coast & Site Director, Dow TX Operations
John Sampson, Senior VP, Operations, Dow
Karen S. Carter, COO, Dow
U.S. Senator John Cornyn (TX)
U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (TX)
U.S. Representative Michael Cloud (TX-27)
TX Governor Greg Abbott
TX Attorney General Ken Paxton
TX State Senator Lois Kolkhorst (SD-18)
TX State Representative J.M. Lozano (HD-43)
Kelly Keel, Executive Director, Texas Commission for Environmental Quality
Scott Mason IV, Administrator, EPA Region 6