Railyard explosion, inspections raise safety questions about Union Pacific's hazmat shipping
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) Federal inspectors have twice found hundreds of defects in the locomotives and railcars Union Pacific uses at the worlds largest railyard in Nebraska, but none of those seem to explain why a shipping container filled with toxic acid exploded there this fall.
Investigators havent confirmed the cause of the Sept. 14 blast in a remote corner of the railroads Bailey Yard in North Platte, Nebraska, about 250 miles west of Omaha. The explosion didnt spread far, but investigators appear to be delving into the questionable decision to load dozens of plastic barrels of perchloric acid inside a shipping container with a wood floor and possibly atop wooden pallets, even though that acid is known to react with wood or any other organic material.
I dont know if youve ever read about perchloric acid, but when it comes in contact with organic material, it becomes highly volatile. So that car was doomed from the day it was loaded, said Andy Foust, a Nebraska leader of the largest rail union that represents the workers who were switching those railcars just before the explosion.
The explosion highlighted not only potential problems at the sprawling railyard but also the national rail networks reliance on everyone involved in shipping hazardous materials taking proper precautions. As the Nebraska explosion made clear, there can be problems that are hard to spot before potentially disastrous accidents occur.
https://apnews.com/article/union-pacific-railroad-safety-explosion-fra-inspections-afc2d979e5bdc2a88cb6b2bfc7583cd9