Nelson Mail

Massive fire destroys Jim Beam warehouse United States

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Crews let a Jim Beam bourbon warehouse in Woodford County burn yesterday after it caught fire overnight, ruining thousands of barrels that leaked bourbon into a nearby creek and the Kentucky River.

The fire at the Jim Beam warehouse burned for ‘‘double-digit’’ hours while firefighte­rs protected nearby warehouses and crews tried to prevent bourbon from flowing into a creek, according to Drew Chandler, the Woodford County Emergency Management director.

Jim Beam said in a prepared statement that the fire will not affect product availabili­ty.

‘‘We operate 126 barrel warehouses in Kentucky that hold approximat­ely 3.3 million barrels for our brands, and the warehouse that was destroyed contained 45,000 barrels of relatively young whiskey from the Jim Beam mash bill. Given the age of the lost whiskey, this fire will not impact the availabili­ty of Jim Beam for consumers.’’ About 45,000 barrels amounts to 7 million litres of bourbon. The barrels were aging in storage, which allows the taste of the bourbon to mature.

There was hope that flames would destroy the distilled spirit in the barrels, stopping runoff and contaminat­ion in nearby Glenns Creek. In addition, Woodford Feed delivered sand requested by firefighte­rs to build embankment­s to prevent leakage into the creek, Chandler said.

But some bourbon found the water.

John Mura, a state Energy and Environmen­t Cabinet spokesman, said, ‘‘there was some material that entered the creek and it is surely already in the Kentucky River.’’ A large amount of fish could die due to lowered oxygen levels in the river, he said. – TNS

 ?? AP ?? Flames and smoke rise from a bourbon warehouse fire at a Jim Beam distillery in Woodford County, Kentucky.
AP Flames and smoke rise from a bourbon warehouse fire at a Jim Beam distillery in Woodford County, Kentucky.
 ?? AP ?? Bourbon mixes with water in the Kentucky River yesterday following a fire at a Jim Beam distillery in Woodford County, Kentucky.
AP Bourbon mixes with water in the Kentucky River yesterday following a fire at a Jim Beam distillery in Woodford County, Kentucky.

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