On April 22, the U. S. Chemical Safety Board held a
news conference to present its recommendations about how to prevent another
disaster such as the one in West, Texas that killed fifteen, injured over 200,
and caused millions of dollars of property damage on April 17, 2013. So far, not a lot has changed in terms
of federal or state regulations pertaining to ammonium nitrate, the fertilizer
chemical that exploded on that fateful day. But a fertilizer trade organization has issued a set of
recommendations that, if followed, will go some distance toward reducing the
chances that another disastrous accident involving the chemical will happen
again.
As long ago as 2002, the Chemical Safety Board
recommended that ammonium nitrate be included in OSHA (Occupational Safety and
Health Administration) and EPA (Environmental Protection Administration)
regulatory programs, but these agencies have not yet chosen to act on these
recommendations. Ammonium nitrate
falls in a gray area between chemicals such as nitroglycerin or TNT that are
clearly dangerous, and others such as sand that are harmless. Under most circumstances, ammonium
nitrate can be handled with little or no risk. But under certain combinations of heat, pressure, and/or
shock, the chemical detonates, transforming many tons of solid matter into hot
gases that expand explosively, as they did in West.
In response to the West accident a trade organization
called The Fertilizer Institute issued a fourteen-page booklet to its members last
February with the title "Safety and Security Guidelines for the Storage
and Transportation of Fertilizer Grade Ammonium Nitrate at Fertilizer Retail Facilities." The title does not promise exciting
reading, though the legalese and lengthy definitions of different types of
ammonium-nitrate fertilizer are enlivened by color photos of fertilizer
manufacturing and handling installations.
The pamphlet summarizes most of the precautions which, if followed,
would have gone a long way toward preventing the West disaster.
These measures fall into two categories: (1) ways to
prevent ammonium nitrate from exploding in the first place, and (2) ways to
avert death and destruction if a fire breaks out where ammonium nitrate is
stored, and the stuff explodes anyway.
The prevention measures are more or less what you'd expect: things like storing the material in
non-combustible bins, rather than wooden ones as were used in the West firm;
installing sprinkler systems or other fire-prevention and fire-fighting
facilities; and treating places where ammonium nitrate is stored like
flammable-material storage areas (no-smoking signs, no sparks or flames nearby,
etc.). Because an exact cause of
the fire at West that led to the explosion may never be found, we cannot know
for certain if these precautions would have prevented the tragedy. But obviously, they are good things to
do, and if fertilizer retailers around the country follow these prevention
guidelines, the chances of another such accident will be reduced.
The second category of recommendations is more
problematic. It involves informing
the wider community, including first-responder agencies, that ammonium nitrate
is stored in the facility and should be treated with extra caution. By the nature of the business, many
fertilizer retailers are located in semi-rural or thinly populated areas. These locales are often served by
volunteer fire departments, and while volunteer firemen theoretically should be
trained as well as full-time paid firefighters, the reality is that their
training may be on the sketchy side. The Chemical Safety Board concluded that the first
responders in West did not know of the dangers presented by the large quantity
of ammonium nitrate stored at the plant where they responded to what appeared
at first to be an ordinary fire, and were much too close for safety. Consequently, when the plant exploded,
most of the people who died were firefighters. The guidance handbook says "The rule of thumb is if
outside emergency responders are necessary, do not fight AN [ammonium nitrate]
fires. For fires that have engaged
AN, plans should focus on evacuation of the area." In other words: don't fight, run.
While the trade-association brochure's advice is
good, it has no legal standing, and firms are free to adopt its recommendations
or ignore them. Simply as a matter
of asset protection, I would hope that fertilizer retailers who sell ammonium
nitrate are at least considering an upgrade of unsafe storage facilities, and
the brochure provides good guidelines as to how to carry this out. However, the informational side of the
recommendations may be harder to implement. A business owner may feel some reluctance in volunteering
the information to local authorities that his facility harbors material that
might reduce a wide swath of his neighborhood to rubble. Nevertheless, there may be courageous
and conscientious owners who will do such things.
Both the Chemical Safety Board and various other
authorities have called for tighter compulsory regulation of ammonium nitrate
storage and transportation. This
is a political as well as a technical and ethical matter, and politics these
days tends to go to polarized extremes.
On the one hand are those who favor centralized uniform federal
regulations for all sorts of things, including ammonium nitrate. On the other hand, a prominent plank in
the Tea Party platform is the idea that government regulations have gone too
far and are stifling free enterprise and economic growth. The regulations contemplated with
regard to ammonium nitrate vary from rules about how the stuff is stored to
rules about notification and training of local first responders. It seems to me that sensible
regulations requiring the exchange of information, perhaps implemented by some
sort of web-based registry, would be the least costly way to make sure that at
a minimum, any firefighters responding to an ammonium-nitrate fire would know
what they are dealing with and would take appropriate precautions.
One way of dealing with this information problem is
by the use of fire codes. However,
the state of Texas has a strong history of anti-regulatory bias. In fact, counties with low population
density in Texas are actually prohibited by state law from enacting fire codes
at all. So around July and
December, you see roadside fireworks stands popping up for a few weeks with
nary a concern for any safety beyond the immediate self-preservation of the
owners in case a customer drops a burning cigarette.
So far, the only concrete public action toward
preventing more ammonium-nitrate fertilizer disasters has been the Fertilizer
Institute's brochure. While they
deserve credit for their efforts, only time will tell whether enough has
changed to keep another fertilizer plant from blowing up, or to save lives if
it does.
Sources:
The news
conference in Dallas on Apr. 22, 2014 held by the Chemical Safety Board was
summarized by a UPI report at http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2014/04/22/US-investigators-Better-regulation-could-have-prevented-deadly-fertilizer-explosion/4731398190424/. The Chemical Safety Board's own
statements at the conference can be downloaded at http://www.csb.gov/assets/1/16/Statement_-_News_Conference_(Final).pdf. The Fertilizer Institute
recommendations can be found at http://www.tfi.org/ammonium_nitrate_guidelines. And I blogged on the West explosion previously
on Apr. 22 and May 20, 2013.
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