Montreal Gazette

Blasts at ruptured oil pipeline kill 35 people in China

Seawater contaminat­ed in wake of incidents

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BEIJING — Leaked oil from a ruptured pipeline in an eastern Chinese port city exploded Friday, killing at least 35 people, injuring 166 and contaminat­ing the nearby sea in one the country’s worst industrial accidents of the year, authoritie­s said.

The leaked oil triggered two huge blasts, one of them tearing up concrete along a city road in Qingdao. Photos posted online showed ripped slabs of pavement, bodies, overturned vehicles and shattered windows in nearby buildings. Black smoke rose above gigantic fuel silos and darkened much of the sky.

The pipeline owned by China’s largest oil refiner, Sinopec, rup- tured early Friday and leaked for about 15 minutes onto a street and into the sea before it was shut off. Hours later, as workers cleaned up the spill, the oil caught fire and exploded in two locations, the city government said.

Authoritie­s ruled out the possibilit­y of terrorism, but the incident remained under investigat­ion, it said.

Calls to Sinopec’s headquarte­rs in Beijing were not immediatel­y answered, but the oil giant issued a statement online, offering condolence­s to victims.

“We will investigat­e the incident with responsibi­lity and give timely reports,” Sinopec said.

The Qingdao Environmen­tal Protection Bureau said barriers had been set up to contain the oil as it spread into the sea, but that a mixture of gas and oil from a storm sewer exploded and caught fire over the sea.

More than 3,000 square metres of sea surface was contaminat­ed, the city government said.

Authoritie­s said the oil had seeped into undergroun­d utility pipes, which could have played a role in the blasts, but they did not elaborate.

They assured the public that the explosions did not affect any petrochemi­cal plant or military facilities in the seaside district and that air quality remained good after the disaster.

The accident will probably add to growing concerns among the members of the Chinese public about safety and environmen­tal risks that come with oil pipeline projects.

 ??  ?? People walk by damaged vehicles and road after an oil pipeline explosion in Qingdao in east China’s Shandong province on Friday. Leaked oil from a ruptured oil pipe caught fire and exploded.
People walk by damaged vehicles and road after an oil pipeline explosion in Qingdao in east China’s Shandong province on Friday. Leaked oil from a ruptured oil pipe caught fire and exploded.

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