NTSB: 400,000 gallons of oil lost in ND derailment

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BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Federal investigators have
determined that 400,000 gallons of oil was lost last month when a train
derailed and caught fire in North Dakota, according to a report released
Monday.
The derailment on Dec. 30 has highlighted concerns about
shipping crude by rail. It also led to a safety alert from the U.S.
Department of Transportation warning about the potential high volatility
of crude from the Bakken oil patch in eastern Montana and western North
Dakota.
According to the National Transportation Safety Board’s
preliminary report released Monday, the eastbound train derailed after
crashing into a grain car that had fallen onto the track after a
westbound train carrying soybeans derailed. The NTSB is studying what
role a broken axle might have played in the derailment of the grain
train.
The derailments of the two BNSF Railway trains sparked
massive explosions about a mile from Casselton, a town of about 2,400
residents in southeast North Dakota. No one was hurt, but about 1,400
people voluntarily evacuated.
How much of the 400,000 gallons of
oil that was lost in the derailment burned off and how much spilled into
the ground is unclear.
"We do know where the grossly contaminated
soil is," said Dave Glatt, chief of North Dakota Department of Health’s
environmental health section.
He said about 25,000 gallons of oil
was recovered from wrecked oil tankers. Each tank car can carry about
650 barrels, or more than 27,000 gallons of oil.
The NTSB said 21
of the 106 cars on the oil train derailed, along with the two leading
locomotives. Twenty of the cars were carrying oil and 18 were punctured.
Damage is estimated at $6.1 million, the report said.
"With the cleanup ongoing, that is not a final cost," said BNSF spokeswoman Amy McBeth said.

Glatt
said about 1,300 tons of oily dirt has been removed so far from the
crash site and sent to an industrial landfill in north-central North
Dakota.
McBeth said at least 6,000 more tons of dirt is expected to be removed during the cleanup
North Dakota regulators are on site monitoring the cleanup that’s being done by a BNSF contractor, Glatt
said.
The
NTSB’s preliminary report said the grain train was traveling at about
28 miles per hour when 13 of its 112 cars left the tracks. The train
carrying oil was travelling at about 42 miles per hour when it collided
with one of the grain cars. Investigators said the maximum speed on the
tracks near Casselton is 60 mph.
Casselton Mayor Ed McConnell said tangled wreckage was still strewn at the crash site on Monday.
"Almost
all of it is still here," McConnell said. "They’ve got it piled off to
the side but it would be nice if they’d get it out of here."
McBeth said crews are working clear the wreckage by cutting it up and hauling it away.
"The amount of time it has taken is pretty typical," McBeth said. "It takes a while to cut
them up and removed."
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