(Wilmington, DE - August 28, 2002) The U.S. Chemical Safety & Hazard Investigation Board (CSB) today voted to recommend that the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administation (OSHA) work to ensure that aboveground chemical storage tanks be regulated under OSHA's Process Safety Management (PSM) standard.
The Board convened outside Wilmington, DE, to deliberate and vote on a series of findings, root causes, and recommendations arising from a yearlong investigation into the July 17, 2001, explosion at Motiva Enterprise LLC's Delaware City refinery.
Contractor employee Jeffrey Davis, 50, was killed in the explosion. His body was never recovered. Eight other workers were injured when a spark from carbon-arc welding equipment ignited flammable vapors in a 415,000-gallon sulfuric acid storage tank at the refinery. The surrounding sulfuric acid tank farm was heavily damaged in the blast, and an estimated 1.1 million gallons of the powerful corrosive were ultimately released to the environment, including nearly 100,000 gallons that flowed into the nearby Delaware River. A significant fish kill occurred there.
The CSB investigation found significant deficiencies in Motiva's mechanical integrity program. If effective, this program should have prevented the extensive corrosion damage that was evident in several tanks at the farm. Some of the tanks contained thousands of pounds of flammable hydrocarbons in addition to the corrosive sulfuric acid.
According to CSB lead investigator David Heller, "Motiva did not act to prevent hot work - high-temperature cutting that could generate molten metal and sparks - from being performed directly above a corroded hazardous storage tank that had holes in its roof and shell and was known to contain flammable vapors."
The Board found that the incident likely would have been prevented if good safety management processes had been adequately implemented at the refinery. Investigators found Motiva did not consider the tank farm to be covered by the requirements of the OSHA Process Safety Management Standard, which sets safety standards for various chemical operations. The Board recommended that OSHA take steps to include such tanks farms under its regulatory system. Under federal law, OSHA will have 180 days to consider the recommendation.
CSB Chairman Carolyn W. Merritt said in closing the meeting: "Implementing process safety programs not only saves lives and protects the environment, it is good business. Companies can directly benefit by adopting a broader view of process safety regulations and standards." She also commented that "Motiva will act to prevent future accidents - but what about all the other companies around the country?"
The Board cited three root causes of the tragic accident. First, the company did not have an adequate mechanical integrity management system. Second, there was an inadequate system for managing engineering and changes in its equipment and processes. Third, the hot work program was inadequate. This program permitted work such as welding to be conducted near tanks containing flammable vapors and did not afford workers adequate protection from flammable hazards, e.g. through ongoing atmospheric monitoring.
According to the investigation, the refinery's sulfuric acid tanks had a history of leaks. But Motiva took no effective action, even when its own tank inspectors recommended full internal inspections "as soon as possible" in three successive annual reports prior to the explosion. Three weeks before the explosion, an operator submitted a formal Unsafe Condition Report noting holes in two tanks and pointing out that the hose used to blanket the tank with nonflammable carbon dioxide was improperly installed. The Board found Motiva investigated the Unsafe Condition Report but took no action to correct the deficiencies.
Interviews with Motiva workers and managers revealed that Motiva did not consider the tank leaks to pose a safety or environmental risk and did not properly engineer an earlier change when the tanks were converted from fresh sulfuric acid storage to used or "spent" acid, which contains flammable hydrocarbons.
The Board approved a full suite of preventive measures, including recommendations that:
The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration expand its Process Safety Management regulatory standard to ensure coverage of similar hazardous storage tanks. The State of Delaware ensure that new regulations under the recent Jeffrey Davis Aboveground Storage Tank Act require prompt action when tank corrosion results in a safety hazard. The Motiva Delaware City Refinery take numerous specific steps to improve chemical process safety, including better mechanical integrity planning, reporting systems, communication with workers, an upgraded hot work program, and improved designs for existing tanks. The Board also approved a recommendation to the refinery's parent company, Motiva Enterprises LLC, to conduct more stringent safety auditing at all of its U.S. refineries. Motiva Enterprises is a joint venture of Saudi Refining Co. and Shell Oil. The Board's final report will be available from the CSB website, www.chemsafety.gov.
The CSB is an independent federal agency established in 1998 with the mission to protect workers, the public, and the environment by investigating and preventing chemical accidents. The CSB determines the root causes of these accidents and makes safety recommendations to government agencies, companies, and other organizations. The CSB does not issue fines or citations or apportion responsibility for accidents. For more information visit www.chemsafety.gov.
For further information contact Sandy Gilmour Communications at (202) 261-7614 or (202) 251-5496 (cell).