Bakken oil through Red Wing?
January 9th, 2014
I don’t know much about this, but I’m learning. What I do know, what I’ve learned, is that it CAN happen here… it has. That is, we’ve had train derailments here in Red Wing, across the river in Hager City, and down river in Winona. Where there are trains, there are derailments (I’ve not forgotten about low-bridging that Monticello nuclear rotor in downtown Minneapolis in … 1997?) So what’s to prevent a Lac Megantic or Casselton, ND explosion from happening here?
Where there are trains there are risks, but are we aware of the risks? Are there new risks? Are we operating on an outmoded understanding of the risks?
In today’s Washington Post:
If a derailment and explosion the magnitude of the one in Casselton, ND were to happen here in Red Wing, what would that mean? If one the magnitude of Lac Megantic were to happen here, what would that mean?
(imagine a graphic illustration here — I’m working on it)
Where are these trains coming from, and where are they going? I found this great map, it’s set for Bakken oil, and when you go to this link and there’s a map, look off to the right, and you’ll see destinations. Click on one of the regions and you’ll see that for the middle of the US, you get Hayti, MO and others. For the East Coast, Delaware City refinery shows up. GREAT MAP!
CLICK THIS LINK FOR A GREAT MAP SHOWING WHERE BAKKEN OIL GOES (it looks better than this map below)
Are we prepared for Bakken oil trains running through town? What about increasing knowledge about explodability of oil tanker cars? What about the discovery that Bakken oil being shipped is more volatile than regular crude oil? What are we doing to address these new risks? Even the federal DOT admits that this is not your father’s crude oil:
Here’s the full 1_2_14 DOT Rail_Safety_Alert
Here’s another issue with Bakken oil, that of increased corrosion:
N. Dakota fracked oil said to corrode rail tank cars, put workers at risk
Of note in that article is that “Montreal, Maine and Atlantic said last week it was forced to file for bankruptcy because of potential liability in the [Lac Megantic] crash.” Great. So they’re subjecting us to these risks, and derailments and explosions can and do happen, and now they’re ducking financial responsibility? Not acceptable.
Now for photos of wrecks:
This week’s train derailment near Plaster Rock, New Brunswick:
Train carrying oil derails, catches fire in New Brunswick, Canada
And one in Wisconsin last March:
A photo of the staging area for Bakken oil tankers headed for the Delaware City refinery, just 5 miles north of our home in Port Penn, DE. This parking lot is 14 tracks deep at its deepest, if you go to google earth, look for Delaware City and on the NW edge of town, you’ll see the refinery, and go to the northwest edge, where the refinery turns into corn fields, and there’s the parking lot. It used to be this large oval, like a huge racetrack, and now there’s this new one:
Some examples of derailments from the Red Wing area.
An article I found says this one below was a westbound train, and that the cars were empty. Good! But there are a lot of eastbound full ones coming through these days…
This one is from February, 2012:
Directly across the river in Hager City, WI, another one in 2012, found on the City of Red Wing site:
And another derailment in Hager City triggered an evacuation of the town!
Back in 2008, another report of a derailment in Winona, with tankers going off into the Mississippi:
And back to Red Wing, here’s a report of another derailed train from February, 1999.
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