I read some interesting
testimony this weekend from Tod Perlin, Fire Chief from the Town of
Rangely, ME. He was one of the US first responders that aided the local
Canadian fire department during the immediate aftermath of the Lac-Megantic
crude-train derailment last year. His description of what happened is very
moving and well worth reading.
There is one very important point that he made in his
testimony at the THUD Subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations Committee hearing
on rail safety. He mentioned that, in addition to pumping water out of a
local lake (the ‘lac’ of Lac-Megantic) because the local fire hydrant system
was compromised in the explosions following the derailment, fire fighters used
”8000 gallons of foam [that]was trucked in from the refinery in Toronto to help
extinguish the burning rail cars”.
This is one of the major emergency response problems for
crude oil and ethanol transportation emergencies; special fire-fighting foam is
needed to put out these fires; water just spreads the flames. Fire-fighting
agencies that have fuel terminals or refineries in their response areas will
typically have access to these specialized foams (and the associated equipment
to apply the foam), but most fire-fighters will not have access to this
important tool. It is just too expensive and hard to justify on short budgets.
One way to ensure that first responders to rail accidents
involving unit trains of crude oil or ethanol have immediate access to the
essential (and correct type of) fire-fighting foam would be to require
railroads to haul a specialized car at the rear-end of such unit trains that
carries the appropriate foam and the necessary application equipment. This way
fire departments along rail rights-of-way would not need to stock the required
equipment; they would only have to pay for the training in its use.
If the equipment was properly designed and the operation
clearly documented, the training costs could probably be almost eliminated. If
a crew of fire-fighters had to read a 5 minute tutorial on the use of the
equipment, it would still be much more readily available than a foam unit being
trucked in from the nearest refinery or fuel depot.
To the best of my knowledge, these cars do not yet exist.
But this is clearly a need that calls out for fulfillment. And if the railroads
and shippers cannot figure that out, maybe they need some encouragement from
the FRA and PHMSA.
1 comment:
It's important to be prepared for fire problems. Whether it's fire fighting equipment or foam to stop the fire in the instance water in unattainable, preparation is key. They were lucky they had truck fulls of the foam to put out the fire from the derailment of the cars. http://www.fireprotectionservices.com.au
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