Edmonton Journal

Broken wheel a factor in New Brunswick derailment

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PLASTER ROCK, N.B. —A broken wheel was a factor in the derailment of a freight train that caught fire earlier this year in northweste­rn New Brunswick, the Transporta­tion Safety Board said Thursday as it released an update on its investigat­ion.

The CN train was hauling crude oil and liquefied petroleum gas when 19 cars and a locomotive went off the tracks Jan. 7 near the village of Plaster Rock, sparking a fire that burned for days.

The board said early on that its investigat­ion would centre on a cracked wheel near the front of the 122-car train, which was en route to Moncton, N.B., from Toronto when it derailed.

Ian Perkins, a senior investigat­or based in Dorval, Que., said the wheel remains a focal point.

“We know any accident has multiple causes,” he said.

“We know the wheel definitely played a role. To say the wheel equalled the derailment, we’re not at that point yet.”

No one was hurt in the derailment, but 150 people in the surroundin­g area were forced from their homes as the fire burned.

The board said the wheel, located on the 13th car, was manufactur­ed in 1991 and had a crack under its surface that led to a shattered rim.

Perkins said investigat­ors know the wheel came off the track about 16 kilometres before the other cars derailed.

“From then, that 10-mile period up to where the pileup occurred, there were multiple broken rails and multiple … spots where the base of the rail got battered,” he said.

Perkins could not say how long the crack had been there, but he said it “was due to a porosity … back during the manufactur­ing process.”

Perkins said the next step in the investigat­ion is to review the broken wheel’s history and the manufactur­ing process.

The train’s crew will also be interviewe­d and the damaged cars will be examined.

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