West Virginia oil train derailment threatens water supply

Towns evacuated after crude oil tankers derail, explode in West Virginia

MOUNT CARBON, W.Va. -- Fires burned for hours Tuesday after a train carrying 109 tankers of crude oil derailed in a snowstorm alongside a West Virginia creek, sending fireballs into the sky and threatening the nearby water supply.

Hundreds of families were evacuated and two water treatment plants were shut down after dozens of the cars left the tracks and 19 caught fire Monday afternoon, creating shuddering explosions and intense heat.

West Virginia train was carrying highly combustible crude before derailment

Part of the formation hit and set fire to a house, and one person was treated for smoke inhalation, but no other injuries were reported, according to a statement from the train company, CSX.

CSX said approximately 100 residents of homes near the derailment site remain evacuated.

"It was a little scary. It was like an atomic bomb went off," said David McClung, who felt the heat at his home about a half-mile uphill. He said one of the explosions sent a fireball at least 300 feet into the air.

Fire crews had little choice Tuesday but to let the tanks - each carrying up to 30,000 gallons of crude - burn themselves out.

The train was carrying volatile Bakken crude from North Dakota's shale fields to an oil shipping depot in Yorktown, Virginia, using model 1232 tank cars, which include safety upgrades voluntarily adopted by the industry four years ago, the Federal Railroad Administration confirmed.

However, a series of ruptures and fires in recent derailments involving model 1232s has the National Transportation Safety Board questioning their safety as well, and the Department of Transportation has drafted new standards being reviewed by the White House budget office.

Improving tail tank car safety was one of the NTSB's "most wanted" items on their 2015 safety list.

All but two of the 109 cars were tankers, and 26 of them left the tracks, the governor's spokesman Chris Stadelman said.

Some tank fires were still on fire late Tuesday morning, but federal investigators were allowed to get within 50 yards of the derailed cars, and Appalachian Power crews were cleared to repair a line and restore electricity to about 900 customers.

The cause was not immediately known. Snow was falling heavily Monday - as much as 7 inches in some places - but it's not clear if the weather had anything to do with the derailment, which happened about 1:20 p.m. about 30 miles southeast of Charleston.

The West Virginia National Guard was taking water samples to determine whether oil seeped into Armstrong Creek, a tributary of the Kanawha River. So far, "we haven't been able to determine how much, if any, crude oil made it into the river," but there were no reports of a sheen so far, state Environmental Protection spokeswoman Kelley Gillenwater said.

CSX contractors also were monitoring the air for pollution linked to the fires, and federal railroad and hazardous materials officials were probing the accident, which prompted Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin to declare a state of emergency.

All but two of the 109 cars being hauled were tanker cars, and 26 of them left the tracks, the governor's spokesman Chris Stadelman said.

But contrary to initial reports by responders at the scene, none of the tankers went into the water, state public safety division spokesman Larry Messina said early Tuesday.

West Virginia American Water shut down a water treatment plant about 3 miles downstream, spokesman Laura Jordan said. Another water plant downstream in the town of Cedar Grove also closed its intake but later resumed operations, Messina said.

The lack of water forced West Virginia University Tech in nearby Montgomery to cancel classes for the rest of the week.

About 85 displaced residents went to shelters set up by CSX and the American Red Cross, Messina said.

The U.S. Transportation Department has advocated tougher safety regulations for rail shipments of crude after a series of fiery train crashes, including one in Lynchburg, Virginia. If approved, they would phase out tens of thousands of the older tank cars increasingly carrying highly flammable liquids along waterways and through towns.

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