The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

COBB: Sterigenic­s defends handling of 2018 blast,

Only operations that could not be stopped safely continued, it says.

- By Meris Lutz mlutz@ajc.com

Sterigenic­s told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on t hat a 2018 explosion inside its medical device sterilizat­ion facility near Smyrna was handled properly and with a focus “on the safety of its employees and its communitie­s.”

A former employee told the AJC last week that operations contin

ued after the explosion, which injured another employee. Sterigenic­s said only limited operations that could not be safely

halted were allowed to continue. Other work stopped for three days while the company con

ducted an investigat­ion, a spokesman told the AJC.

So-called back-end operations “were required by strict emission control protocols and standards to safely capture and control residual EO gas that is emitted by already-sterilized products following the sterilizat­ion cycle,” the spokesman said. “If Sterigenic­s had simply shut down and ceased these important back-end operations, it would have resulted in uncontroll­ed EO emissions that could have posed a potential danger to employees and breached regulatory requiremen­ts.”

EO is an abbreviati­on for ethylene oxide, a combustibl­e carcinogen­ic gas used in the sterilizat­ion process.

To support its account, the company provided the newspaper customer emails sent three days after the accident, saying the plant could not accept five scheduled deliveries because it had suspended operations.

“Due to a failure of a system, the Atlanta facility had an uncontroll­ed incursion of EO into a

chamber that created an unsafe environmen­t to operate,” said

the email from Sterigenic­s general manager Daryl Mosby to one of the company’s clients.

“The event required a facility evacuation and shut down,” the email said. “While the event did not directly affect your product, per our safety procedures, the facility suspended process

ing while a safety investigat­ion was completed.”

The company declined the AJC’s request for additional documentat­ion that might show the plant fully ceased operations after the

accident. The state Environmen­tal Protection Division said it could not independen­tly verify whether the plant had closed or suspended operations.

“The bottom line is that Sterigenic­s is focused on the safety of its employees and its communitie­s as it sterilizes vital medical products and devices,” a company spokesman wrote in an email to the AJC. “The company did not waiver from that focus in its response to this unfortunat­e incident.”

Sterigenic­s has been targeted by protesters who want the Cobb County plant shut down because of permitted emissions of ethylene oxide. Two state lawmakers have also called on Gov. Brian Kemp to shut down the plant.

The July 10, 2018, explosion occurred around 3:30 a.m. in one of the plant’s sterilizat­ion chambers, sending a worker to the hospital. The incident was reported to the National Response Center, which handles toxic spills, about 18 hours later at 9:20 p.m., according to the state EPD.

When the EPD establishe­d contact with a company representa­tive the next day, Sterigenic­s told the agency that no reportable release of ethylene oxide had occurred, and the state closed the case. The company is required to report leaks immediatel­y if it cannot determine how much of the chemical has been released, or if it’s greater than 10 pounds.

The state found that Sterigenic­s failed to report a separate leak in April 2018 and warned that it could face fines if future leaks went unreported.

The federal Department of Labor did not open its inquiry into the explosion until July 16, nearly a week after the incident. That inquiry was closed in January with no issuance of citations against the company. The AJC is waiting for the agency to issue the full report in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request.

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