CSX
train hauling North Dakota oil derails, cars ablaze in West Virginia
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[February 17, 2015]
By Kara Van Pelt
BECKLEY, W.Va. (Reuters) - A CSX Corp
train hauling North Dakota crude derailed in West Virginia on Monday,
setting a number of cars ablaze, destroying a house and forcing the
evacuation of two towns in the second significant oil-train incident in
three days.
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One or two of the cars plunged into the Kanawha River, said Robert
Jelacic of the West Virginia Department of Homeland Security and
Emergency Management.
CSX said the train was hauling 109 cars from North Dakota to the
coastal town of Yorktown, Virginia, where midstream firm Plains All
American Pipelines runs an oil depot. It said one person was being
treated for potential inhalation of fumes. No other injuries or
deaths were reported.
As of 9:30 p.m. local time, billowing flames could still be seen
coming from several rail cars and something appeared to be burning
on the partially frozen river.
Clean-up was expected to take several days, as the fires burn
themselves out, said Joe Crist, Fayette County fire coordinator.
About 200 residents were evacuated.
Crist said West Virginia American Water was testing to see if
Kanawha River water had become contaminated.
West Virginia State Police First Sergeant Greg Duckworth, who was at
the crash site, said that nine or 10 of the cars had exploded at
intervals of about every half hour. A similar sequence has occurred
in a handful of other derailments over the past year and a half,
with the fire from one tank heating up gases in the next nearest
car, causing it to ignite.
“It’s a real mess down here," Duckworth said.
Crist said freezing temperatures and constant snowfall is making
clean-up difficult.
A mile-wide area around the incident was evacuated after a house
caught fire, said Lawrence Messina, spokesman for the West Virginia
Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety.
West Virginia Governor Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of
emergency for Kanawha and Fayette counties.
The train derailed at 1:20 p.m. EST about 33 miles (54 km) southeast
of Charleston, the state capital, according to Fayette County 911
Coordinator James Bennett.
The derailment occurred less than 200 miles (320 km) west of
Lynchburg, Virginia, where another CSX train also bound for the
Plains terminal in Yorktown derailed and erupted last April. Plains
did not immediately return calls seeking comment.
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RAIL SAFETY CONCERNS
The latest incident came just two days after a Canadian National
Railways train from Alberta's oil sands derailed in a wooded area of
northern Ontario. CN said 29 of 100 cars were involved and seven
caught fire. No injuries were reported, but the cars were still on
fire on Monday.
A boom in oil shipments by rail and a spate of derailments across
North America have put heightened focus on rail safety. In 2013, 47
people were killed in the Quebec town of Lac-Mégantic after a train
carrying crude oil derailed and exploded.
The latest incidents will likely refocus attention on U.S. and
Canadian regulators' efforts to improve the safety of such
shipments, which have spurred concerns over both the flammability of
very light oil from the North Dakota Bakken shale as well as the
flawed design of older tank cars.
The U.S. Transportation Department has submitted a proposal to the
White House to require adding an extra 1/8th inch of steel to most
existing oil train tank shells, while new models would have the
thicker hull installed on the factory floor.
It was unclear what kind of tank cars were involved in the
derailment on Monday.
(Reporting by Kara Van Pelt in Beckley, W.Va., Marcus Constantino in
Boomer, W.Va., and Jonathan Leff in New York; Editing by Chris
Reese, Tom Brown, Mary Wisniewski, Peter Cooney and Eric Walsh)
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