Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Safety board: Oil train tank cars need urgent upgrades

- By Matthew Brown

BILLINGS, MONT. » Tank cars carrying oil or ethanol by rail urgently need to be retrofitte­d or replaced to make them more fire-resistant after a spate of explosive accidents in recent months revealed the shortcomin­gs of voluntary industry standards, U.S. safety officials said Monday.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board issued a series of recommenda­tions calling for tank cars to be fitted with protective systems better able to withstand fire than the bare steel constructi­on now widely in use. It said a decade-long retrofit timeline that’s been suggested by the tank car industry was too long to wait.

“The longer we wait, the more we expose the public to the problems of these cars that aren’t especially robust,” NTSB Chairman Christophe­r Hart told The Associated Press.

One alternativ­e cited by the safety board would equip flammable liquids cars with ceramic “thermal blankets” that surround the tank and shield it from intense heat should a nearby car catch fire. Those blankets already are used for transporti­ng liquefied petroleum gas.

Also recommende­d were relief valves that can prevent pressure from building inside tank cars as they heat up from nearby fires.

The industry in 2011 voluntaril­y adopted rules requiring sturdier tank cars for hauling flammable liquids such as oil and ethanol. But cars built to the new standard split open in at least four accidents during the past year, including oil trains that derailed and burned in West Virginia in February and Illinois last month.

The recommenda­tions come as the Department of Transporta­tion considers new rules to bolster tank car safety. Oil and ethanol train crashes have stirred widespread worry in the U.S. and Canada, where 47 people were killed when a runaway oil train crashed in Lac-Megantic, Quebec two years ago.

If the Transporta­tion Department decides it would take too long to retrofit the existing fleet with new protective features, it should consider significan­t speed restrictio­ns on trains as an interim measure, the NTSB said in its recommenda­tions.

The volume of flamma- ble liquids transporte­d by rail has risen dramatical­ly over the past decade, driven largely by the oil shale boom in North Dakota and Montana. Since 2006, the U.S. and Canada have seen at least 23 oil-train accidents and 33 ethanol train accidents involving a fire, derailment or significan­t amount of fuel spilled, according to federal accident records reviewed by the AP.

The fleet of oil and ethanol tank cars is projected to top 115,000 cars by the end of 2015.

Many are owned not by railroads but by the oil and ethanol producers that ship their product via rail. That’s created friction between the energy and rail industries as each looks to the other to foot the bill for safety improvemen­ts.

The Associatio­n of American Railroads said in response to Monday’s NTSB announceme­nt that it supports aggressive steps to retrofit or replace the tank car fleet. “Every tank car moving crude oil today should be phased out or built to a higher standard,” the group said in a statement.

The Railway Supply Institute, which represents tank car users and manu- facturers, said companies already have spent more than $7 billion on voluntary upgrades.

Those companies are ready to do more, but it will take time, said the group’s president, Tom Simpson.

Two Democratic lawmakers, U.S. Senator Ron Wyden and Rep. Peter DeFazio, both of Oregon, urged the Obama administra­tion to move quickly on new rules for oil trains. Regulators need to “get these cars upgraded quickly, or get them off the tracks completely,” Wyden said.

A spokesman for the American Petroleum Institute said the organizati­on supports a “science-based” approach to safety that includes track maintenanc­e and repairs in addition to tank car upgrades.

To get to refineries on the East and West coasts and the Gulf of Mexico, oil ship- ments travel through more than 400 counties, including major metropolit­an areas such as Philadelph­ia, Seattle, Chicago, Newark and dozens of other cities.

Railroads hauled 493,126 tank cars of crude oil last year, up from just 9,500 cars in 2008 before the boom took off in the Bakken region of North Dakota, Montana and Alberta. Each holds about 30,000 gallons of fuel.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A crew member walking near the scene of a train derailment Feb. 17 near Mount Carbon, W.Va. Tank cars carrying oil or ethanol by rail urgently need to be retrofitte­d to make them more fire-resistant after a spate of explosive accidents in recent months...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A crew member walking near the scene of a train derailment Feb. 17 near Mount Carbon, W.Va. Tank cars carrying oil or ethanol by rail urgently need to be retrofitte­d to make them more fire-resistant after a spate of explosive accidents in recent months...

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