N.D. oil train burns; 20 evacuated

Cars carrying crude from Bakken field derail near town

Emergency personnel gather Wednesday as smoke rises from a fire after a BNSF Railway derailment that forced residents of Heimdal, N.D., to evacuate.
Emergency personnel gather Wednesday as smoke rises from a fire after a BNSF Railway derailment that forced residents of Heimdal, N.D., to evacuate.

BISMARCK, N.D. -- An oil train derailed and caught fire early Wednesday in a rural area of central North Dakota, prompting the evacuation of a nearby town where about 20 people live.

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AP

An oil train burns after it derailed Wednesday morning in rural central North Dakota, prompting the evacuation of a nearby town of 20 people. Ten rail cars caught fire in the accident, but no injuries were reported. Officials were monitoring air quality and trying to determine whether waterways were affected.

No injuries were reported in the accident about 7:30 a.m. near Heimdal, about 115 miles northeast of Bismarck. Ten tanker cars on the BNSF Railway train caught fire, creating thick black smoke, state Emergency Services spokesman Cecily Fong said.

The BNSF Railway train was hauling oil from the state's Bakken patch, said Jeff Zent, spokesman for Gov. Jack Dalrymple. It wasn't immediately known whether the crude had been treated under new state rules aimed at reducing the volatility of oil from the region.

"Those are questions that will have to be answered," Zent said.

The derailment follows a string of oil-train fires linked to the crude from the Bakken region and is the first since the state in April began requiring companies to reduce the volatility of Bakken crude before it can be transported. A spokesman for BNSF Railway did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

North Dakota officials have said the rules would make the volatility of treated oil comparable to gasoline. Critics have said the state's requirements were too lax and insufficient to prevent major fires.

The Federal Railroad Administration, the National Transportation Safety Board and the Environmental Protection Agency all sent investigators to the scene of the derailment Wednesday. The EPA wants to gauge any contamination to waterways in the vicinity, spokesman Rich Mylott said.

The rail line through Heimdal runs next to an intermittent waterway known as the Big Slough, which drains into the James River about 15 miles downstream near Bremen, N.D.

There were preliminary indications that some oil from the derailed cars got into Big Slough, but it will be difficult to verify until the fire dies down and officials can get closer to the scene, state environmental health chief Dave Glatt said. In a similar incident outside Casselton in December 2013, almost all of the spilled oil was consumed in the fire, he said.

The Health Department was monitoring air quality and advising people not to breathe in the smoke from the fire. The danger from the smoke is mainly the particles it contains such as ash, not toxic chemicals, Glatt said.

The train had 109 cars, 107 with crude oil and two buffer cars between the tankers and engine that were loaded with sand, BNSF said. It was unclear how many cars derailed, and there was no immediate word on the cause.

Curt Benson, a 68-year-old retired sheriff, said the explosion outside town rattled his house. After seeing about half a dozen derailed cars on fire, he alerted authorities, who he said took about half an hour to get to the rural area. Rainfall likely stopped the fire from spreading to nearby grassland, he said.

"It could have been a lot more devastating had it been dry," he said.

The rain also might have helped wash some of the particles out of the smoke, though it also might keep the plume closer to the ground and more likely to be encountered by people, Glatt said.

Since 2006, the U.S. and Canada have seen at least 24 oil-train accidents involving a fire, derailment or significant amount of fuel spilled, according to federal accident records. The derailment Wednesday was the fifth this year and comes less than a week after the Department of Transportation announced a rule to toughen construction standards for tens of thousands of tank cars that haul oil and other flammable liquids.

Administrator Sarah Feinberg of the Federal Railroad Administration said in a statement that the accident was "yet another reminder" of the need for changes that have been resisted by the oil industry, which says it will take years to get the unsafe tank cars replaced or off the tracks.

BNSF said the tank cars that derailed were constructed under a 2011 voluntary rail industry standard intended to make them tougher than older cars that were long known to pose a safety risk.

The five major oil-train accidents so far this year in the U.S. and Canada all involved the newer cars, each of which can hold about 30,000 gallons of fuel.

Roughly 22,000 of the cars are in service hauling crude oil and must be retrofitted or replaced by 2020 under the new federal rule. Cars hauling ethanol, another fuel involved in multiple accidents, have a longer timeline for replacement.

A Section on 05/07/2015

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