Eastern Eye (UK)

Panel on gas leak suggests shifting LG Polymers plant

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AN investigat­ion into a deadly gas leak at a South Koreanowne­d chemical plant in southern India that killed 12 people in May recommende­d the factory be moved away from inhabited areas, according to its full report released on Tuesday (7).

The probe at the plant run by LG Polymers, owned by South Korea’s LG Chem Ltd, found the company was negligent and warning systems were not working, the local state government said on Monday (6).

The investigat­ion was set up after toxic styrene gas leaked from the chemical plant near the Indian city of Visakhapat­nam in the early hours of May 7, choking many people who were sleeping and killing 12.

LG Chem said on Tuesday it had undertaken a host of safety measures. “We have fully cooperated for the investigat­ion and will sincerely respond to the probe result and take measures,” LG Chem said in a statement.

In its report, the committee listed 21 major reasons for the accident, including improper storage design, haphazard maintenanc­e of the old storage tank and disregard for red flags. It blamed the company’s management for 20 of those causes.

The temperatur­e inside the oldest of the three storage tanks holding styrene monomer, a chemical used in making polystyren­e products, rose to more than six times the permitted level due to polymeriza­tion, a chemical reaction that generates heat. “The company management had ignored the rise in polymer content from April 4, 2020, and then the sharp rise on April 25/28,” the committee said.

“The management considers polymer content as a quality measure for styrene rather than a safety measure,” it said.

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