Thursday, March 24, 2005

BP oil refinery blast kills 14, wounds 100

After 9/11, my Texan friend cautioned me to stay away from Houston, and when I asked why, he said, "Chemical plants."

Across a narrow stretch of water from my future home of choice (Galveston), lies Texas City, which is essentially all chemical plants, and...BP oil....

The fiery blast Wednesday at BP's 1,200-acre plant near Houston shot flames high into the sky, forced schoolchildren to cower under their desks and showered plant grounds with ash and chunks of charred metal. Windows rattled more than five miles away.

[...]

The plant is BP's largest refinery and the third largest refinery in the U.S.

[...]

The cause of the explosion was not immediately known. It happened in a part of the plant used to boost the octane level of gasoline. A thorough investigation is under way, BP America president Ross Pillari said Thursday.

[...]

Another explosion forced the evacuation of the plant for several hours last March. Afterward, OSHA fined the refinery $63,000 for 14 safety violations, including problems with its emergency shutdown system and employee training.

Texas City is the site of the worst industrial accident in U.S. history. In 1947, a fire aboard a ship at the Texas City docks triggered a huge explosion that killed 576 people and left fires burning in the city for days.

"Welcome to life in Texas City," Marion Taylor, 55, said Wednesday. "I was born here and pretty much, it happens from time to time."
  ABC News article

I like a philosophical approach.

Plus, gas prices expected to rise because of it.

I'm going out on a limb here and suggest that $63,000 in fines for safety violations isn't all that noticeable to a huge oil company.


Wednesday

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