Oil
barge crashes into gas pipeline in Louisiana, triggers big fire
A
grotesque collision of fossil-fuel-laden vessels happened in a bayou
south of New Orleans on Tuesday evening, where tug-boat operators
crashed a barge carrying crude oil into a submerged natural-gas
pipeline.
13
March, 2005
The
result was predictable: A spectacular conflagration erupted that
injured two of the four members of the tug-boat crew, including the
captain, who reportedly suffered burns covering more than three
quarters of his body. Emergency crews on Wednesday were scrambling to
contain spilled oil spreading south of the accident.
The
crash occurred at about 6 p.m. local time 30 miles south of New
Orleans on Bayou Perot, according to the Coast Guard.
Pipeline
owner Chevron isolated the severed section of line by shutting off
some of its valves, and emergency crews allowed the gas left inside
it to burn off, The Washington Post reports. Various outlets reported
that the barge was carrying more than 2,000 barrels of oil and that
the tug boat was fueled with diesel.
The
fire burned through the night and past dawn.
The
oil spill may be substantial. In a telephone interview on WGNO this
morning, while the tug and pipeline still burned, a Coast Guard
spokesman said a 30-foot-wide ribbon of “what looks like combusted
oil” was heading south from the accident site.
The
fishing area and oil and gas field is no stranger to fossil-fuel
accidents. Shorelines in the area were heavily polluted following
BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the spring and summer of 2010.
And in late 2010, three welders were injured when the rig they had
been working aboard in the shallow waterway exploded.
Those look interesting. Keep posting.
ReplyDeleteShella
www.imarksweb.org