Arkema to ‘Ignite’ Remaining Trailers at Texas Chemical Site So Work Can Start
September 4, 2017 by admin
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Authorities said Sunday that they will blow up the six remaining trailers at the Harvey-wrecked Arkema chemical plant near Houston so crews can stop waiting and get to work assessing the threat at the flooded facility.
Three of the nine trailers, which each house a half-ton of highly flammable materials, have already ignited at the plant in Crosby, about 20 miles northeast of Houston, sending choking black smoke high into the sky.
Two of those three trailers exploded. Authorities have warned since last week that further blasts were likely, saying there was nothing they could do about it.
Related: Harvey Danger: How Toxic Is the Air in Texas Chemical Plant Explosion?
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Sunday, Arkema Inc. said in a statement that “there is clear visual evidence that the chemicals in the trailers are degrading but they have failed to ignite completely,” forcing hazard assessment teams to stay out of the plant.
To get it over with, the company said, “a decision was made by Arkema Inc. in coordination with unified command to take proactive measures to initiate ignition of the remaining trailers through controlled means.”
“Both Arkema and members of the unified command believe this is the safest approach,” it said.
Arkema gave no further details, but it said there was no additional risk to the community, which has already been evacuated for 1½ miles around the site.
The Harris County fire marshal’s office confirmed the plan Sunday afternoon.
The smoke that has poured from the facility has irritated the eyes and throats of more than a dozen law enforcement officers, Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez said. Some of them went to the hospital out of precaution.
Harvey’s waters have also flooded at least 13 of the 41 Superfund toxic waste sites in the region, the Environmental Protection Agency said Saturday based on aerial imagery, raising alarms about long-term pollution and contamination.
The announcement confirmed an Associated Press report that the EPA hadn’t yet been able to physically visit the Houston-area sites, most of which Mayor Sylvester Turner said are just outside the city.
“It certainly would be important” to have the EPA on the ground at the sites to contain potential contamination, Turner said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said Sunday that does expect the EPA “to get on top” of the threat.
“The EPA is monitoring that,” Abbott said on “Fox News Sunday.” “We are working with the EPA to make sure that we contain any of these chemicals harming anybody in the greater Houston area or any other place.”
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Frankfurt WW2 bomb defused after mass evacuation
September 4, 2017 by admin
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Bomb disposal experts in Frankfurt have successfully defused a massive unexploded bomb from World War Two, officials have announced.
The news was greeted with spontaneous applause among some of about 65,000 people who were evacuated to enable experts to make the bomb safe.
Many residents are now awaiting permission to return to their homes.
The evacuation on Sunday morning was the biggest in post-war German history, involving hundreds of officials.
Police checked every designated house with heat-detection technology to make sure everyone was out.
The evacuation area in the Westend district included hospitals, nursing homes and Germany’s central bank.
There are believed to be hundreds of thousands of unexploded wartime bombs across Germany.
Police early on Sunday morning cordoned off the 1.5km (1 mile) evacuation area as residents carrying luggage vacated the danger zone. A few stragglers who were slow to move may be prosecuted, local media reported.
Many residents made the most of the day, either by visiting relatives or enjoying a day out in a different part of the city.
Police told local media that the evacuation took place on schedule even though a handful of residents – for various reasons – were not initially prepared to vacate the area.
The 1.4 tonne British bomb was found on a building site on Wednesday.
More than 100 patients from two hospitals were moved on Saturday including premature babies and people in intensive care. Some care home residents left early on Sunday.
Fire and police chiefs in the city warned that an uncontrolled explosion of the HC 4000 bomb would be powerful enough to flatten an entire street.
The bomb disposal operation was completed ahead of the 12-hour estimate.
Police helicopters carrying heat detecting cameras scoured the area as bomb disposal experts began their task. Police will continue guarding empty houses and apartments from burglars until evacuees have returned home.
The area affected included 20 retirement homes, an opera house, and Germany’s central bank where half the country’s gold reserves are stored.
The city opened shelters for evacuees to spend the day, and most museums opened their doors for free.
A smaller evacuation took place on Saturday in Koblenz, about 110km (68 miles) west of Frankfurt, while experts disposed of a World War Two bomb that had been found during the construction of a new kindergarten.
So, how many unexploded bombs are there in Germany?
An average of about 2,000 tonnes of unexploded ordnance are found each year in Germany. It’s estimated that about half the 2.7 million tonnes of bombs dropped by Allied powers during World War Two landed on German soil (compared to about 74,000 tonnes of bombs dropped on the UK by Germany). Many of the bombs were equipped with malfunctioning time-delay fuses, and many never went off.
Adding to the problem are Russian artillery shells, German hand grenades and tank mines, as well as Russian munitions from training facilities in post-war East Germany.
The problem is so widespread that Germany has a bomb-disposal unit, the Kampfmittelbeseitigungsdienst (KMBD), dedicated to the problem. Its technicians are among the busiest in the world, deactivating a bomb every two weeks or so – and they estimate their work will continue for decades to come.
Do the bombs pose a real threat?
Dozens of bomb-disposal technicians and hundreds of civilians died from uncontrolled explosions in the decades following the war. The rate of fatalities has slowed since, with 11 technicians said to have been killed in Germany since 2000.
But experts warn that the devices that remain could be getting more unstable as the munitions age and their fuses grow more brittle, and as bombs are discovered in more built-up, harder-to-reach areas.
The problem is also worse in certain parts of Germany. Oranienburg, just outside Berlin, has the dubious distinction of being the “most dangerous town in Germany”. Under Adolf Hitler, it contained an armaments hub, aircraft plant, railway junction and a nuclear research facility – so it was a key target for the Allies, who gave it an aerial pounding. Almost 200 bombs have been defused in the town since the end of the war, and residents are well-drilled in the evacuation procedure. But with experts estimating that some 350-400 bombs remain buried, the task is far from complete.
Other WW2 bombs recently discovered in Germany
- May 2017: 50,000 people were evacuated from Hannover while three British-made bombs were defused
- December 2016: More than 50,000 evacuated in Augsburg over 1.8-tonne British explosive
- May 2015: 20,000 people in Cologne forced to leave their homes after a one-tonne bomb was discovered
- January 2012: A construction worker was killed when his digger hit an unexploded bomb in Euskirchen
- December 2011: 45,000 people were evacuated from Koblenz – half the total population – after two bombs were found in the riverbed of the Rhine
- June 2010: Three members of a bomb disposal squad were killed in Göttingen during an operation to defuse a bomb found on a building site