Here we go again,
contaminating West Virginia water supply
West Virginia In
State Of Emergency After Massive Oil Train Explosion
Crude oil poured into the Kanawha River that supplies drinking water, 800 homes lost power, the river caught on fire and approximately 1,000 people have been evacuated from their homes due to an
oil train derailment and explosion near Montgomery in southern West Virginia on Monday,
according to media reports...
The train, owned by CSX Corp., was carrying more than 100
tankers of crude oil from the Bakken shale in North Dakota when it derailed at
about 1:30 p.m., the L.A. Times reported.
Officials estimated that approximately 27 of those tankers were involved in the
derailment and 15 in the subsequent fire, which is expected to burn for 24 hours. Gov. Earl
Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency at around 5:40 p.m.
The tankers exploded at different times so people in the area were subjected to a string of deafening explosions.
Two water treatment plants were shut down to avoid a repeat of the previous contamination that affected 300,000 people a year ago.
The tankers exploded at different times so people in the area were subjected to a string of deafening explosions.
Two water treatment plants were shut down to avoid a repeat of the previous contamination that affected 300,000 people a year ago.
One home has so far been
confirmed destroyed, and at least one person has been sent to the hospital for
inhaling smoke. CSX put out a statement
Monday night saying it would provide hotel rooms for displaced residents.
Concerns have also been raised about the
potential contamination of local water-treatment facilities, after officials
noted that at least one of the derailed tanker cars fell into the Kanawha
River. The area is about 30 miles from the location where 10,000 gallons of a
coal industry chemical called crude MCHM spilled and tainted the drinking water
supply a little over one year ago.
Response efforts have so far been hampered by heavy snow. The
area has been under a winter storm warning, according to the Associated Press,
and is expected to get anywhere from 5 to 10 inches of snow tonight.
The derailment in West Virginia was the second major oil train mishap this
weekend. Late Saturday night, a train carrying Bakken crude oil derailed in
northern Ontario, Canada, spilling oil and causing a fire. In that incident, 29
of the 100 cars on the train went off the track near Timmins, Ontario. An
“unknown amount” of oil was spilled.
Some research has suggested that Bakken shale crude oil is more
prone to catching fire and exploding than other types of crude. According to
the Wall Street Journal,
it’s the most explosive type compared to oil from 86 other locations worldwide,
and The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) has confirmed
that it can catch fire at lower temperatures than heavier oil.
Though much of the political discussion over fossil fuels has
recently focused on Canadian tar sands oil and a certain proposed
pipeline that would carry it, it’s worth noting that Bakken shale oil
is primarily shipped by rail. Indeed, up to 90 percent
of the North Dakota’s oil was expected to be shipped by rail, rather than
pipeline, in 2014.
The U.S. Transportation Department is currently considering
whether to implement tougher safety
regulations for rail shipments of crude oil.
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