----------------------------------------------

An oil field exploded in Basra Iraq [Iraq Oil Report ; Published September 20, 2011]; Comment by Starr DiGiacomo

----------------------------------------------

List of comment about gas explosion, in order of posted time; as of 2011-09-01

 

1) SOMERVILLE, Ohio, US; "Investigation continues in house collapse"

2) BAKERSFIELD, Calif. US; "Bakersfield resident hurt in natural gas explosion"

3) Pompton Lakes, NJ, US; "Update: Suspected gas explosion levels home in Pompton Lakes [raw video]"

4) Brantford, Ontario, Canada; "Natural gas explosion levelled Brantford house: fire marshal"

5) Warren, MI, US; "City of Warren Home Explosion Underscores Need for Natural Gas Safety"

6) Castleford, West Yorkshire, UK; "Dramatic footage shows huge gas explosion at Yorkshire home"

7) Warren Park, Harare, Zimbabwe; "2 seriously injured in Warren Park gas explosion"

8) Logan City, south of Brisbane in Queensland, Australia; "Seven children killed in gas explosion at house"

9) Herscher, IL, US; Douglasville, GA, US; "This Week In Natural Gas Leaks and Explosions – Aug. 22, 2011"

10) "Seven children killed in gas explosion at house" [See 8)]

11) Lakeview, MI, US; "Explosion inside Lakeview house causes fire, couple escapes with minor injuries"

12) Newborough, Victoria, Australia; "Gas blast destroys Newborough garage"

13) Cato, Montcalm, MI, US; "Couple escapes house explosion"

14) Glenrock, Converse, WY, US; "Oilfield explosion claims three"

15) St. Augustine, Fla, US; "Gas Station Explosion Site in St. Augustine now 'Stable'"

 

----------------------------------------------

* Comment by Starr DiGiacomo

We'll be seeing an uptick in unusual home and business gas explosions and I'm trying to locate specific ZT on the matter.  Below is a refresher for the many gas related news articles.

http://zetatalk5.com/index/blog0214.htm

SOZT

Fault lines, when adjusting, do not just rip apart one day during a dramatic earthquake. They most often creep. Laying gas lines along or across a fault line is asking for an accident of this sort. Fault lines are also seldom so clearly delineated that one can go a mile in this or that direction and avoid their action. Where a slip-slide fault such as the San Andreas will often leave a clear line on the surface, this is only the surface action, not what occurs in the rock layers on either side which can fracture for a long way to either side during any movement. The gas company, or the age of the pipes, will be faulted but in truth the finger should be pointed in many directions. The public, who insist on living at such a scenic spot, is to blame. Officials, who zoned for housing are to blame. The public utility company, for allowing gas lines in the area, is to blame. But this will change nothing, while man continues to live on the San Andreas, even as it awakens. EOZT

http://www.zetatalk5.com/ning/18sp2010.htm

SOZT

The danger from radon gas will not be increased as a result of the pole shift. Radon gas is emitted by rock containing uranium, which is degrading. In normal circumstances, where air can circulate, it is disbursed rapidly as is any methane created by decay of organic material. The danger from these gasses comes from confinement - being trapped in a mine, a basement, or beneath the permafrost. The dangers are well known. For methane, it is explosions. An accumulation of methane gas can be identified by the smell of rotten eggs, or as some have described it, dirty socks or cabbage soup. For radon gas the danger is lung cancer, from the continual exposure to the radioactive air. Radon gas is odorless, and cannot be detected except by specialized equipment not in the hands of the average person.

In that the pole shift, or the Earth changes preceding the pole shift, can fracture rock and release pockets of either gas, survivors should be cautious about huddling in bunkers. You are safer out in the open air, or in a trench you have dug that will allow the pole shift winds to pass over you, but nothing to fall on and crush you. The fact that both methane gas and radon gas can accumulate in the bunkers of the elite is one of the reasons we have stated that they have dug their own graves. EOZT

http://www.zetatalk5.com/ning/12mr2011.htm

 

* Comment by Starr DiGiacomo

SOZT

Anyone watching the news, for instance the news on the San Bruno explosion in a distribution line close to the San Andreas Fault line, knows that gas in any form is a danger. Oil and gas refineries explode when rigid piping cracks. Oil or gas wells explode when the ground around them moves. And the gas distribution lines running under cities are no exception. They likewise will explode. Gas lines, whether along the street or within a home, are rigid. In some cases automatic shutoff valves can limit the amount of gas available for an explosion by sensing a drop in pressure, but this is always after the fact. The explosion has already occurred. Utilizing gas on a planet prone to earthquakes was a mistake to begin with, but man never thinks of the consequences when striving for modern conveniences. We have advised turning off the gas at the street, though when the street explodes and your neighbor's homes are on fire you are not likely to escape the holocaust. A better alternative is to live in an area where gas is not available, as in your rural safe location where you will be doing a form of camping while gardening. A campfire at night, for cooking and washing and a bit of friendly light before bed. Nothing explosive. EOZT

http://www.zetatalk5.com/ning/02oc2010.htm

 

* Comment by Starr DiGiacomo

SOZT Answer: It is no accident that the New Madrid fault lies under the Mississippi River near Memphis, as rivers form in lowlands created when land pulls apart, separating the rock fingers and weakening support for the land. Thus, the Ohio River bed also is an indication of where rock fingers will pull apart. Two adjustments in Kentucky, a day apart, are not an accident, but an indication of the speed at which the stretch zone is starting to adjust. Rail lines are frequently an early harbinger of such adjustments, as they run long distances, whereas structures within cities, such as tall buildings, take up relatively little space and have a small footprint. Our warning that imploding cities will be experienced, before the hour of the shift, are in this regard. Be warmed, it will not just be your rail lines and gas and water mains that will shatter and be pulled apart during the stretch. The foundations of your tall buildings will likewise be vulnerable.EOZT

http://www.zetatalk5.com/newsletr/issue008.htm

----------------------------------------------

[Original post on January 20, 2011]

Original title: Gas explosion kills 1, injures 5 in Philadelphia

 

http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/01/19/pennsylvania.gas.explosion/index.h...

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • The explosion occurred in Philadelphia's Tacony neighborhood
  • The blast killed one utilities worker and injured five other people
  • Some of the injuries are serious

(CNN) -- A gas main explosion in Philadelphia Tuesday evening killed one utilities worker and injured five other people, a fire department official said.

Philadelphia Gas Works employees were responding to a gas main break in the city's Tacony neighborhood when the explosion occurred, fire department spokesman Jim Smith said.

"They were trying to control it and found a source of ignition," according to Smith, who said four PGW employees and a firefighter were among the injured. He said some of the gas workers' injuries were serious.

http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/video/natural-gas-explosion-philadelphia-...

http://abcnews.go.com/US/video/caught-on-tape-gas-main-explodes-126...

Views: 109299

Comment

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Comment by Kojima on April 22, 2013 at 4:21am

Thank you Starr DiGiacomo.

Google-Map of Wyoming Natural Gas Blast

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on April 21, 2013 at 4:55am

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2013/04/20/299383/china-mine-blast-kil...

Mine explosion kills 18, injures 12 in northeast China

Rescuers search for survivors at a coal mine in southwestern China after a gas explosion. (File photo)

Rescuers search for survivors at a coal mine in southwestern China after a gas explosion. (File photo)
Sat Apr 20, 2013 11:48PM
A coal mine explosion has killed 18 people and injured 12 others in the northeast region of China.


Xinhua news agency quoted local authorities as saying the blast occurred in Helong city in Jilin province on Saturday.

The rescue operation ended after about 12 hours and a probe into the cause of the accident was under way, authorities said.

Steep rises in iron ore prices over the past several years have encouraged the development of mines with marginal ore quality and minimal safety standards in China.

China's mining industry is the most dangerous in the world. According to official figures, thousands of miners have been killed in accidents in recent years.

The Chinese government has repeatedly shut down hundreds of mines as part of efforts to improve safety standards.
Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on April 20, 2013 at 11:25pm

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/europe/Three-killed-in-Mos...

Three killed in Moscow building gas blast

MOSCOW: Three people were killed and four others injured in a gas explosion and fire in a high-rise building in Moscow, the emergencies services said on Saturday. Three apartments were damaged following a gas explosion in an apartment on the building's sixth floor Friday evening. The blast caused fire, and the blaze was extinguished early on Saturday. A total of 120 emergencies ministry officers and 17 units of special machinery were working on the site. The residents of the building in Shirokaya Street were evacuated and temporarily accommodated in a nearby school.

Comment by Tracie Crespo on April 18, 2013 at 4:39pm

Update from yesterdays explosion. http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/04/17/17800341-5-to-15-killed-...

5 to 15 killed, 160 wounded in 'devastating' Texas chemical plant blast

Waco Police Sgt. W. Patrick Swanton said Thursday that there has been looting in West, Texas, which was decimated by a fertilizer-plant explosion.

Rescue crews were going door to door Thursday in the ruins of a small Texas town where a fertilizer-plant explosion killed at least 5 to 15 people, wounded more than 160 and destroyed dozens of home and businesses, including a nursing home.

"I don’t know how many folks may still be trapped in rubble," said Sgt. William Patrick Swanton, adding that police were also coping with looters in the area.

"Homes have been destroyed. There are homes flattened. Part of that community is gone."

Those still missing included three to five firefighters who were battling a blaze at the plant when it blew up just before 8 p.m. Wednesday, shaking the ground with the force of a magnitude-2.1 earthquake and unleashing a plume of smoke over the farming town of West.

 
 

"It just sucked you in and just threw you to the ground," resident Crystal Jerigan told TODAY, describing how she grabbed her two daughters out of a car and dove through the front door of their house.

There was no indication of criminal activity, although the area was being treated as a crime scene as a precautionary measure, said Swanton, who works for the police department in Waco, about 20 miles away from West.

"It was a huge explosion," he said. "It reached blocks, if not miles, in its devastating effect. ... My guess is going to be that ... we will see the casualty rate rise and the injury rate rise."

The blast decimated a five- to-six block radius around the plant, where two massive tanks held highly pressurized anhydrous ammonia. It wrecked about 50 to 75 homes in the area and a middle school. The walls were torn off an apartment complex.

"It's a lot of devastation. I've never seen anything like this," McLennan County Sheriff Parnell McNamara told Reuters. "It looks like a war zone with all the debris."

At daybreak, the fire at the plant and several more at surrounding homes were smoldering. Rescue crews were hoping to find people alive in debris.

"Those guys and gals out there are in a heart- and gut-wrenching job and they’re doing the best they can," Swanton said.

Resident Sammy Chavez, who ran to the West Rest Haven nursing home despite being injured, told KXAS he found surreal scene.

“I just saw the explosion and then after that I took off running and then I saw the West home, and people you know were buried under the West home, the West home was gone,” Chavez said. “It was gone. The school’s gone. The apartments are gone. It’s horrible.”


Rod Aydelotte / AP

The huge blast rocked a small Texas town causing an unknown number of deaths and destroying nearby homes.

The blast could be felt for miles.

Derrick Hurtt was in his truck, recording the fire from about 300 yards, when the flames erupted with a blinding flash, followed by a towering pillar of smoke.

He caught the explosion on his camera, along with the panicked screams of his daughter Khloey, who begged him to drive away.

“I’m pretty sure it lifted the truck off the ground. It just blew me over on top of her,” Hurtt said on TODAY. “It all happened so quick that things kind of went black for a moment.”

 

“It was a pretty horrific scene, some of the injuries we saw,” he said.

Mayor Tommy Muska, who is also a firefighter, was heading to the plant to battle the blaze when it exploded.

"It blew my hat off, and then I heard it. I felt it before I heard it," Muska said. "It was a very powerful explosion."

There are only about 2,700 residents in West, many of whom were taken to shelters.

Hillcrest Baptist Medical Center in Waco said it treated 101 patients and admitted 28. Five of them were in the intensive care unit, two in critical condition. Emergency room Dr. Bradford Holland said injuries included skull and leg fractures and large cuts.

Providence Hospital in Waco said it had received 65 patients, many with abrasions and broken bones and some in respiratory distress, apparently because of chemical or smoke inhalation.

It is the “most devastating thing that’s happened to this community,” Muska said at a news conference. "We need your prayers."

Mariah Garcia/photo via NBCDFW.com

Smoke rises from the scene of a fertilizer plant explosion near Waco, Texas, on Wednesday, April 17..

"There’s a lot of people that are hurt. And there’s a lot of people that I’m sure are not going to be here tomorrow. ... It is a cut across our hearts."

The cause of the fire and explosion were unknown. The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives was leading the investigation.

"Nothing at this point indicates that we have had criminal activity," Swanton said.

In a safety report on file with the Environmental Protection Agency, the West Fertilizer Co. said that there was no risk of fire or explosion from the ammonia stored near a residential neighborhood and a school, the Dallas Morning News reported. The main hazard was an accidental release of the gas, the report said.

Initial fears about dangerous fumes from the fire were allayed by about 6 a.m. ET., with Swanton saying "air quality at this point is not an issue."

Texas Gov. Rick Perry said in a statement that state resources were being made available to local authorities.

"Our thoughts and prayers are with the people of West, and the first responders on the scene," he said.

A White House official said the Obama administration was aware of the situation and monitoring local and state response through the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

NBC News’ Matthew DeLuca and Reuters contributed to this story.

Satellite view showing location of West Fertilizer Company in West, Texas.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on April 18, 2013 at 4:47am

http://rt.com/usa/texas-fertilizer-plant-explosion-036/

Multiple casualties in Texas fertilizer plant explosion (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

Published time: April 18, 2013 01:32
Edited time: April 18, 2013 02:36

Photo from instagram.com user andybartee

A massive explosion has rocked a fertilizer plant near Waco, Texas. Rescue crews are on the scene as a number of injuries have been reported, according to local affiliate KWTX. Several buildings are thought to have been destroyed.

The explosion occurred around 7:50pm local time in the town of West, north of Waco. A fireball of nearly 100 feet high has been reported along with a massive power outage.

There were accounts of people trapped in a nearby nursing home, which had been damaged, and residents stranded in an adjacent apartment building. Initial reports indicated that at least five victims were in critical condition.

A large swath of West was “leveled” in the explosion, according to WFAA-TV Dallas reporter Jason Whitely.


Nine emergency helicopters were reported to be en route to the local high school. Emergency officials were also trying to evacuate a neighborhood near the site of the explosion. Hospital officials told CNN they were anticipating as many as 100 victims.

Photo from twitter.com user @mariahrain14

Police officers were witnessed transporting the injured in their squad cars.

At least 10 other buildings are on fire, including the town middle school, according to other media outlets. Every available ambulance had been dispatched while fire crews from neighboring areas have rushed to the scene.

An emergency responder requested help over local radio with a “major collapse” on a second floor where children were thought to be trapped.
 
Multiple commenters on RT’s story reported feeling the blast from their homes, which were located as much as dozens of miles from the fertilizer plant.

Comment by Kojima on April 13, 2013 at 12:53pm

* Video Gallery - Tyler County Gas Explosion Videos [WBOY-TV; Posted: Apr 12, 2013 9:53 AM JST, Updated: Apr 13, 2013 7:23 AM JST]

UPDATE: Authorities Investigating Tyler County Explosion; 4 Injured

TYLER COUNTY, W.Va. -WTRF.com UPDATE:

Authorities are investigating the cause of an explosion at a gas well compression site in Tyler County Thursday night after four people suffered injuries.

According to the Tyler County Sheriff's Office, at about 7 p.m., Tyler County 911 received a call from a Eureka Hunter employee of an explosion with storage tanks on fire and at least two people injured at the Twin Hickories Road compression station near Wick, W.Va.

Fire and emergency responders were sent to the scene along with the Tyler County Sheriff Deputies. According to a press release, fire units from Shirley, Alma, Middlebourne, Sistersville as well as Saint Mary's from Pleasants County and Paden City from Wetzel County responded.

According to the release, three people were flown by helicopter to West Penn Burn Center in Pittsburgh. A fourth person was taken to Sistersville General Hospital.

The condition of the victims is unknown.

Stay with 7News and WTRF.com for updates on this developing story.

* 4 injured in explosion at gas compressor station in Tyler County [The Republic; 12 April 2013]

MIDDLEBOURNE, West Virginia — Tyler County officials say four people were injured in an explosion at a natural gas compressor station near Wick.

Emergency Management Director Tom Cooper tells The Intelligencer (http://bit.ly/12T4FUy ) that three workers were transported by medical helicopter to hospitals. The sheriff's department says a fourth person also was injured and taken to a hospital.

The explosion occurred Thursday night at the Twin Hickories compressor station. Such stations are placed along natural gas pipelines to help propel the gas through the lines.

The cause of the blast is unknown and remains under investigation.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on March 13, 2013 at 5:15pm

http://barentsobserver.com/en/energy/2013/03/gas-explosion-arctic-g...

Gas explosion at Arctic gas field

Eight people were injured in a gas explosion at the Bovanenkovo gas field in the Yamalo-Nenets region early this morning.

Bovanenkovo gas field will have an annual production of 75-115 billion cubic meters by 2015. (Photo: Gazprom.ru)

Eight people were injured in a gas explosion at the Bovanenkovo gas field in the Yamalo-Nenets region early this morning.

 

The accident happened when workers in a workshop for gas treatment were adjusting equipment. An uncontrolled blast of gas partly ruined the workshop and injured eight workers, Business TASS reports. An investigation group from Gazprom is on its way to the site.

Bovanenkovo  holds 4,9 trillion cubic meter of gas and is the biggest gas field in the Yamal Peninsula. The field is in its final stage of preparation before launch. According to Gazprom, the first startup complex of the field has entered the final stage of pre-commission work. At the same time, the first string of the Bovanenkovo-Ukhta pipeline, which will bring the gas towards western markets, is in the process of being completed. Only small parts of welding remains on the 1240 km long pipeline, and testing is in the progress, BarentsObserver reported earlier.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on March 12, 2013 at 8:27pm

http://www.abc4.com/content/news/top_stories/story/Gas-explosion-ra...

Gas explosion rattles Uintah County

JENSEN, Utah (ABC 4 News) - A gas explosion broke windows in a quarter mile radius from Adler Hot Oil Service Company in Jensen, Utah.

It lit up the early morning sky Saturday at 12:13 a.m. "I've never seen anything like this before," said truck wash manager, Jamie Cox.

Investigators say gas fueled the blast, which destroyed eight near-by buildings and at least one home in a 600 yard radius of the explosion.

"When it turned light the devastation was unreal.  It looked like you dropped an atomic bomb," said business owner Brett Woods.

Jamie Cox says the blast's shock wave rattled him awake in his Vernal home 15 miles away.

He quickly traveled Jensen. "I saw the devastation and it was heartbreaking.  There was one home that was pushed about four inches off the foundation," Cox said.

No one was hurt or killed. The timing of the blast saved lives. A cafe across the street from the explosion is often filled with hungry customers.

Business owners are marveling the sheer power of the explosion as they sift through the scattered debris.  "It carried insulation a quarter of a mile away so I mean the blast was large-- very very large," Cox said.

Locals tell ABC 4 this same building exploded about two years ago.

The explosion will leave hundreds without jobs.

A gas leak caused the explosion. Investigators suspect it was propane.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on March 8, 2013 at 10:48pm

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2290302/Terror-massive-gas-...

Terror as massive gas explosion rips through Syrian refugee camp

  • Black smoke rising over the Zaatari camp in Jordanian city of Mafraq
  • Authorities said the blaze did not result in any death or injuries
  • Estimates suggest some 7,000 refugees are fleeing Syria every day

By Leon Watson

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on March 7, 2013 at 8:13pm

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/explosion-injur...

Explosion injures at least 10 at American Steel in Granite City




UPDATED at noon with conditions of workers taken to Mercy Hospital.

GRANITE CITY • At least 10 workers were injured this morning in an apparent gas explosion at the American Steel plant in Granite City, authorities said.

Granite City Assistant Fire Chief Jim Snelson said gas ignited at the plant shortly before 8 a.m. Thursday.

Three of the 10 workers were in critical condition Thursday after being flown by medical helicopters to St. Louis-area hospitals, according to hospital staff. At least one of them was burned and others may have suffered inhalation burns.

Seven of the workers were receiving treatment at Gateway Regional Medical Center in Granite City for treatment of smoke inhalation. A hospital spokeswoman said their conditions ranged from "stable to guarded." Two others were in critical condition at Mercy Hospital in Creve Coeur.

American Steel Foundries is at 1700 Walnut Street, at Niedringhaus Avenue. It is a division of Amsted Rail Co.

No one from the company was available for comment Thursday but Scott Hassall, business manager for Elecrical Workers Local 309 that represents some plant employees, said the blast was in an area where the plant produces bolsters, or heavy central frames for railroad car wheel trucks.

Hassall said he could not talk about the incident but could only explain what the line produces where it happened. He said the plant casts the bolsters and then finishes the cooled product with grinding machines. He said the accident occurred where the grinding, or finishing, takes place.

He said his members were in the plant talking with investigators, which is why he didn't yet want to discuss the accident.

The workers at the plant also are represented by the United Steel Workers, Machinists, and Pattern Makers unions.

Karl Armstrong, assistant area director for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration office in Fairview Heights, said an inspector has been dispatched to the plant to begin an investigation.

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