UPDATE 3-Train collision in North Dakota sets oil rail cars ablaze
Dec
30 (Reuters) - A BNSF train carrying crude oil in North Dakota collided
with another train on Monday setting off a series of explosions that
left at least 10 cars ablaze, the latest in a string of incidents that
have raised alarms over growing oil-by-rail traffic.
Local
residents heard five powerful explosions just a mile outside of the
small town of Casselton after a westbound train carrying soybeans
derailed, and an eastbound 104-car train hauling crude oil ran into it
just after 2 p.m. CST (2000 GMT), local officials said. There were no
reports of any injuries.
Half of the oil cars have been separated
from the train, but another 56 cars remain in danger, said Cecily Fong,
the public information officer with the North Dakota Department of
Emergency Services. The collision destroyed both engines on the oil
train. Both trains were operated by BNSF Railway Co, which is owned by
Warren Buffett's Bershire Hathaway Inc.
The incident threatens to
stoke concerns about the safety of carrying increasing volumes of crude
oil by rail, a trend that emerged from the unexpected burst of shale
oil production out of North Dakota's Bakken fields. Over two-thirds of
the state's oil production is currently shipped by rail.
"Approximately
10 cars are fully engulfed resulting in heavy smoke in the area," the
Cass County sheriff said in a statement, adding that local fire and
hazardous material teams are battling the blaze. The sheriff said it was
not yet clear how the collision had occurred.
City officials
said they had heard a series of explosions following the collision,
including one as recently as 3:40 p.m. CST, more than an hour after the
incident. Residents within 10 miles (16 km) were asked to remain indoors
to avoid contact with the smoke.
The derailment occurred about a
mile west of Casselton, a small town just west of Fargo, between an
ethanol plant and the Casselton Reservoir, Fong said.
RAIL CROSSROADS
North
Dakota is home to a raging shale oil boom that produced nearly 950,000
barrels of oil a day in October. It is also a major grain producer and
long accustomed to a high volume of rail traffic.
But shipments of oil have surged lately, most of it the light, sweet Bakken variety that experts say is particularly flammable.
Trains
carried nearly 700,000 barrels a day of North Dakota oil to market in
October, a 67 percent jump from a year earlier, according to the state
Pipeline Authority.
This summer, a runaway oil train carrying
Bakken crude derailed and exploded in the center of the Quebec town of
Lac-Megantic, killing 47 people. The incident fueled a drive for tougher
standards for such shipments, including potentially costly retrofits to
improve the safety of tank cars that regulators have cited as prone to
puncture.
In early November, two dozen cars on another 90-car oil
train derailed in rural Alabama, erupting into flames that took several
days to fully extinguish.
The Association of American Railroads
recently proposed costly fixes to older tank cars that do not meet its
latest standards but continue to carry hazardous fuels such as oil.
The
fixes include protective steel jackets, thermal protection and pressure
relief valves, which could cost billions of dollars. Oil shippers,
likely to be saddled with the costs of retrofits, oppose some of the
changes proposed by the association.
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