Chattanooga Times Free Press

Wacker to resume chemical operations

- BY MARK PACE STAFF WRITER

The Wacker plant in Charleston, Tenn., will begin polysilico­n production in the coming weeks, nearly eight months after an explosion at the site shook the Bradley County community, led to several hospitaliz­ations and temporaril­y shut down some area schools and roads.

Wacker was tasked with stabilizin­g the affected area, investigat­ing the incident and completing restoratio­n efforts before it resumed production, according to company spokeswoma­n Lisa Mantooth. Those efforts took months to complete.

Wacker will use a phase-in approach, according to a release from the company, and expects to reach full capacity in the fourth quarter of this year. Employees already have begun the initial start-up of the site, which involves distillati­on of the product.

Employees were kept on staff and scheduled throughout the shutdown so they could continue to receive pay. The company held training and continued work in other parts of the plant while investigat­ors tried to determine what caused the explosion and how it could be fixed.

“Wacker-Charleston has already become stronger and better,” according to a statement from company vice president and site manager Mary Beth Hudson. “The global Wacker organizati­on has demonstrat­ed tremendous support of the Charleston site.”

Investigat­ors hired by Wacker determined the incident was caused by a mechanical failure in the company’s hydrogen recovery building.

A state investigat­ion into the incident returned five serious violations and two “other-than-serious” violations resulting in more than $25,000 in fines. Another state investigat­ion into an incident eight days prior to the explosion that sent five workers to the hospital with chemical burns found additional serious violations and resulted in fines for the company.

A separate Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on investigat­ion into the incidents is still ongoing, according to agency spokespers­on Kim Schofinski.

The German company’s polysilico­n sales in the first quarter dipped by 18 percent, to $265 million, “as a result of the production shutdown at Charleston,” according to the company’s first quarter report released this week.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? Clouds billow from the Wacker polysilico­n chemical plant after an explosion released a hydrogen chemical gas in September in Charleston, Tenn.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND Clouds billow from the Wacker polysilico­n chemical plant after an explosion released a hydrogen chemical gas in September in Charleston, Tenn.

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