I worked in a lab that analyzed mercury samples regularly for regulatory purposes. Not familiar with Texas specifically, but those numbers seem quite low. I would be quite surprised if those were over the limit for that jurisdiction. And even if they are, it's a far far far cry from what would be considered "egregious."
The last link there is the Texas standards that I think apply to this case and its set to no more than 1.3 μg/L or about 10 times what was detected at Starbase. The only thing SpaceX has to fear are frivolous lawsuits from groups like SaveRGV.
I worked in a lab that analyzed mercury samples regularly for regulatory purposes. Not familiar with Texas specifically, but those numbers seem quite low. I would be quite surprised if those were over the limit for that jurisdiction. And even if they are, it's a far far far cry from what would be considered "egregious."
The last link there is the Texas standards that I think apply to this case and its set to no more than 1.3 μg/L or about 10 times what was detected at Starbase. The only thing SpaceX has to fear are frivolous lawsuits from groups like SaveRGV.