Toronto Star

Refinery blast rattles Saint John

Two people injured in explosion, but no evacuation was required

- With files from Alex Cooke in Halifax and Alanna Rizza and Nicole Thompson in Toronto. KEVIN BISSETT THE CANADIAN PRESS

SAINT JOHN, N.B.— Irving Oil says all their employees and contractor­s have been accounted for after a massive oil refinery explosion that shook the historic port city Monday and sent flames and plumes of black smoke into the air.

Saint John Regional Hospital was treating two patients from the explosion, the local health authority confirmed Monday afternoon.

“Several contractor­s are being treated for non-life threatenin­g injuries in relation to this incident,” Irving said in a tweet.

Residents described feeling an explosion shortly after 10 a.m. AT, and said flames and smoke could be seen from a great distance from the refinery, on the city’s east side.

“We felt our house shake,” Saint John resident Aimee Boyde shared with the Star. “It’s about 10 minutes from where we live and we are waiting to see if we get evacuation orders.”

Boyde says she’s still afraid because she has four kids, pets and has waited almost two hours to see if they still need to be evacuated.

“Irving oil is a big place, both roads out of red head end up beside Irving,” she added.

One worker at the refinery, who didn’t want to be identified, said the blast had been enough to knock him down.

“There was quite a shockwave when the blast happened,” he said as he left with co-workers hours later.

Litsa Daeres, 34, who lives nearby, said she just started preparing Thanksgivi­ng dinner when she heard a “loud bang.”

“My whole house shook,” she said. “I thought my furnace had exploded.”

But then Daeres opened her curtains and saw the flames and thick, black smoke, she said.

No flames were visible by 2:30 p.m. AT, with four separate sources of water being poured on the blaze. Ambulances could be seen coming and going, but without their emergency signals.

The employees said the explo- sion happened in an active part of the refinery, and not in a section currently undergoing a maintenanc­e shutdown.

The refinery is near several residentia­l neighbourh­oods about five kilometres from the city core, known as Uptown.

“Praying for the safety of all involved,” Saint John Mayor Don Darling said on Twitter.

Geoffrey Downey, spokespers­on with the New Brunswick Emergency Measures Organizati­on, said there were only “couple minor injuries at this point, but nothing serious.”

Downey said no evacuation orders had been issued, but there was an “order to shelter in place for anyone living in the direction of the plume.”

The Saint John Regional Hospital had issued an “orange alert,” meaning it was preparing for a possible influx of patients.

But the health authority later tweeted that the hospital “is running as usual today.”

According to the Irving Oil website, the refinery produces more than 320,000 barrels of “finished energy products” every day, with more than half going the U.S. northeast.

Nate Guimond, 36, said he was doing house repairs when he looked outside and saw the scene.

“There was thick, pitch black smoke mixed with white smoke,” Guimond said. “I heard a rumbling, roaring sound.”

He decided to drive by the refinery, and said he was nearby when he felt the vibrations of what he assumed must be a second explosion.

Saint John Police tweeted that they were responding to the incident, and asked people to stay away from the area. Several streets have been closed down.

Steeves said the incident reminded him of a similar event in the late 90s, when the same refinery suffered a similar explosion which left one person dead.

Irving Oil said it would release more informatio­n when it became available.

“On behalf of all New Brunswicke­rs, our thoughts are with the workers affected and with the community of Saint John,” Premier Brian Gallant said in a tweet.

 ?? STEPHEN MACGILLIVR­AY PHOTOS THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Flame and smoke erupts from the Irving Oil refinery in Saint John, N.B., on Monday. Residents described feeling an explosion shortly after 10 a.m.
STEPHEN MACGILLIVR­AY PHOTOS THE CANADIAN PRESS Flame and smoke erupts from the Irving Oil refinery in Saint John, N.B., on Monday. Residents described feeling an explosion shortly after 10 a.m.
 ??  ?? Saint John Emergency Management Organizati­on manager Mike Carr looks on as Mayor Don Darling addresses the media.
Saint John Emergency Management Organizati­on manager Mike Carr looks on as Mayor Don Darling addresses the media.

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