American History
Related: About this forumOn this day, March 23, 2005, the Texas City refinery explosion occurred.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_PageTools
Coordinates: 29°22'23"N 94°56'20"W
Texas City refinery explosion
The destruction in the trailer area west of the ISOM unit
Date: March 23, 2005
Time: 1:20 pm (CDT)
Venue: BP Texas City refinery
Location: Isomerization plant
Coordinates: 29°22'23"N 94°56'20"W
Type: Vapor cloud explosion
Cause: Overfilling of a blowdown stack with liquid raffinate due to faulty instrumentation and poor execution of unit start-up procedure
Deaths: 15
Non-fatal injuries: 180
Property damage: $200 million ($300 million in 2024)
Inquiries: BP's internal investigations, Baker Panel independent investigation, Chemical Safety Board investigation
Convicted: BP Products North America Inc.
Charges: Violation of section 112(r)(7) of the Clean Air Act
Verdict: BP pled guilty and settled for $50 million and a probation period of three years
Litigation: Approximately 4,000 claims
Costs: Approximately $2.5 billion of liabilities for BP
The Texas City refinery explosion occurred on March 23, 2005, when a flammable hydrocarbon vapor cloud ignited and violently exploded at the isomerization process unit of the BP oil refinery in Texas City, Texas, killing 15 workers, injuring 180 others and severely damaging the refinery. All the fatalities were contractors working out of temporary buildings located close to the unit to support turnaround activities. Property loss was $200 million ($289 million in 2022). When including costs of repairs, deferred production, fines and settlements, the explosion is the world's costliest refinery accident.
{snip}
Emergency response
Firefighting operations
The site emergency response team intervened immediately, mounting a search and rescue operation. An order was issued for the shelter-in-place of 43,000 people. Mutual aid and Memorial Hermann Life Flight resources were mobilized by 1:45 pm. The feed to the raffinate splitter was not shut down, but it stopped at 2:45 pm when electrical power went down. Fires were brought under control by 150200 firefighters after two hours. Ambulances and Life Flight stood down by 4:44 pm. The final body was found under a heap of debris at about 11:00 pm.
{snip}
ProfessorGAC
(69,862 posts)In particular, I read the whole CSB (Chemical Safety Board) report. And, the Mogford report which was much more CYA than informative.
Many of the people who died did so because they were housed in prefabs, essentially mobile homes.
In the blast, those trailers turned into shrapnel. It has been surmised that at least 3 of those killed had a better chance to survive had they just been standing outside the same distance away.
Very sloppy design & inspection before & during fabrication were main culprits. One pipefitter used an incorrect elbow, which was wholly unsuitable for the application. What was that elbow even doing in the construction inventory for that unit?
The safety culture there was rotten and it cost 15 people there lives.
The money they saved by being sloppy was under 1% of the total cost they paid for this incident. Really stupid business decisions caused a disaster.