Showing posts with label heavy weight tank cars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heavy weight tank cars. Show all posts

Monday, October 12, 2015

Oil hauls thought to be overtaxing rail system

Oil hauls thought to be overtaxing rail system

The only sign of trouble aboard a Norfolk Southern train hauling roughly 9,000 tons of Canadian crude in western Pennsylvania last year was a moderate sway in the locomotive as it entered a bend on the Kiskiminetas River.

The first 66 cars had passed safely around the curve when the emergency brakes suddenly engaged, slamming the train to a stop. The conductor trudged back nearly a mile through newly fallen snow to see what had happened.

Twenty-one cars had derailed, one going through the wall of a factory. Four tank cars were punctured, sending 4,300 gallons of crude pouring out of the wreckage.

The cause of the accident in North Vandergrift was identified as a failure in the rails -- not aging or poorly maintained tracks, but a relatively new section laid less than a year earlier.

The February 2014 crash fits into an alarming pattern across North America that helps explain the significant rise of derailments involving oil-hauling trains over the last three years, even as railroads are investing billions of dollars in improving the safety of their networks. A review of 31 crashes that have occurred on oil trains since 2013 puts track failure at the heart of the growing safety problem.

Track problems were blamed in 59 percent of the crashes, more than double the overall rate for freight-train accidents, according to a Los Angeles Times analysis of accident reports. Investigators and rail-safety experts are looking at how the weight and movements of oil trains may be causing higher-than-expected track failures.

The growing number of trains hauling crude oil from Canada and the Northern Plains are among the heaviest on the rails today, many extending more than 100 cars in length and weighing 19,000 tons or more.....

.... Of the 31 crashes involving crude or ethanol since 2013, 17 were related to track problems and 12 a mix of other causes. The cause of the two other crashes remains unclear. The count is based on final or preliminary government and railroad investigations that were collected by the Times under the Freedom of Information Act or in U.S., Canadian and railroad company filings.

Weight, oil sloshing and cold temperatures are among the issues that might be exacerbating the problem, according to rail-safety experts.

Investigators at Safety Transportation Board Canada, which is examining the eight accidents that have occurred in that country, are beginning to suspect that the oil trains are causing unusual track damage.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Heavy oil trains, defective tracks cause derailments - plus links



The Transportation Safety Board (TSB) has suggested that heavy oil tanker cars may have contributed to the Gogama area derailments in the past month. TSB photo shows the twisted wreckage of the Makami River bridge that was destroyed in the March 7th derailment.   

March 17, 2015     by Jennifer A. Dlouhy    FuelFix.com 

WASHINGTON — Federal regulators seeking to boost the safety of moving oil by rail should focus on improving the integrity of the nation’s train tracks, not just the tank cars that carry crude, a top refining industry representative says.

Charles Drevna, head of the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers, questioned “how strong a role prevention is playing in the Department of Transportation’s comprehensive strategy” for combating crude-by-rail derailments, in a letter to Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx.

“Any effort to enhance rail safety must begin with addressing track integrity and human factors, which account for 60 percent of derailments,” Drevna said in his letter, sent Monday and released Tuesday. “Investments in accident prevention would result in the greatest reduction in the risk of rail incidents.”…     more here


NY State rail inspectors find more defects in oil cars, tracks

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State and federal safety inspectors uncovered a total of 93 defects statewide over a two-day period last week, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday. Seven were deemed “critical defects” requiring immediate action, according to the state Department of Transportation. Three of them were along Canadian Pacific’s mainline between Fort Edward and Burnt Hills, where inspectors also found 11 non-critical defects.....   more here


Rotting ties, loose bolts found on CSX track near Rockland

 Khurram Saeed,      The Journal News     3/17/15

......Rockland County Executive Ed Day said CSX should be making these fixes "without being prompted" by the state.

"They're breaking a trust with the public at this point and they really need to step up their game," Day told The Journal News.....    more here


Bay Area residents hold Air District accountable for protecting health and climate from refinery pollution

Bay View  3/17/15

Richmond, Calif.Communities across the region’s oil belt stood up to industry pressure to demand that air officials clean up refinery pollution instead of letting it worsen at a news event and air policy workshop today.

Communities and workers are fighting to protect our health, safety and climate from dirtier oil projects that our Air District should be stopping instead of proposing to allow,” said AndrĂ©s Soto, Communities for a Better Environment (CBE).

At issue are new regional rules on refinery emissions monitoring and control that are being developed by the Bay Area Air Quality Management District. Despite an Oct. 15, 2014, vote by the District’s board to develop rules that would reduce refinery emissions of toxic, smog-forming and climate-disrupting air pollution, the rules it proposes now include loopholes that allow increased emissions from new oil projects..... more here

By LEN GILLIS    The Timmins Times

An interim report on the second Gogama-area train derailment, the one that occurred on Saturday Mar. 7, suggests it might have been partially the result of the heavy oil tank trains having a higher-than-normal impact on the tracks.....    more here