Train derailment and explosion in Lac-Mégantic, Québec
This is horrible. My thoughts are with those in Lac-Mégantic.
Quebec town rocked by explosions, fire after derailment
A train carrying crude oil derailed overnight in the heart of Lac-Mégantic in Quebec's Eastern Townships, sparking a major fire that led to the evacuation of 1,000 people from their homes.Witnesses reported between four and six explosions overnight in the town of about 6,000 people. The derailment happened at about 1 a.m. ET, about 250 kilometres east of Montreal.
It is not yet known if there are any casualties, but several people have been reported missing and are feared dead.
There are 60 people missing as of now. I can't even think about this.
This accident is a complete disaster for Lac Megantic with the many evacuated and missing that raises serious safety questions about transporting oil by rail and to some extent even by pipelines. There are also environmental questions as some of the escaping oil is at risk of seeping into the lake, which is described as pristine in TV broadcasts.
Tom Mulcair has just spoken out about the need to return rail safety to government control on CBC TV.
During a CBC interview with a rail safety expert, he noted that the federal government has taken railway safety inspection from Transport Canada and given to the railways. In BC, we have seen a large increase in accidents when BC Rail, a former Crown Corporation, was taken over by the private sector CN even in its first year of operation after the change of ownership.
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/story.html?id=e0a65b25-4c05-4942-894a...
While saying safety is their number one priority, our railways have been focused on cutting costs by laying off workers, including those involved in safety, in order to increase profits.
http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Rail+rides+restructuring+record+pro...
Railway unions have been warning about the risks of rail accidents as railways focus on profits over safety.
http://business.financialpost.com/2013/05/21/unions-flag-safety-concerns...
The following article in the Transportation Law Journal summarizes the state of Canadian rail safety since the 1980s in its conclusion.
http://www.tc.gc.ca/media/documents/rsa-lsf/benedict.pdf
http://www.torontosun.com/2013/07/06/train-derails-in-quebec-sets-off-ex...
This is precisely why pipelines must be considered over rail transport for crude and/or bitumen. Railways, by definition, will always pass through populated areas which pipelines can avoid. The simple fact is that our society runs on petroleum products, and pipelines are far safer than rail for raw materials transport.
The simple fact is that while pipelines are safer than railways for transporting petroleum products, if either are left to enforce their own safety standards, accidents in both will increase dramatically, as they already have. Government regulation, in which revolving door switching between regulators and the regulated is prohibited, is necessary to minimize such accidents. This accident provides another reason, in addition to climate change, to transform our economy from fossil fuels to green renewable energy as quickly as possible
Which would be great -- but it isn't going to happen anytime soon. I'd be quite surpised if I lived to see a mass exodus from petroleum-based products to green energy in my lifetime (I'm in my 40s, BTW). All we can do for now is try to extract, transport and process these materials in as safe a way as possible. If more stringent oversight will help then it's a no-brainer.
duplicate
The story has made the Guardian: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jul/07/quebec-rail-crash-death-toll
I disagree strongly with richardp. We must take transition action, climate action NOW!
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2357352/Breaking-news-Canadian-town-center-wiped-freight-train-carrying-hund" />
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2357352/Breaking-news-Canadian-town-center-wiped-freight-train-carrying-hundreds-tons-crude-oil-derails-explodes.html" />
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2357352/Breaking-news-Canadian-town-center-wiped-freight-train-carrying-hund" />http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2357352/Breaking-news-Canadian-town-center-wiped-freight-train-carrying-hundreds-tons-crude-oil-derails-explodes.html" />
I guess Toronto has already been forgotten. Image is the deadly Sunrise Petroleum explosion from 2008.
I actually think we all agree here. I'm just being realistic: with the amount of money behind the resource economy, no amount of protest is going to stop the extraction, processing and transport of petroleum products. The only thing that will change that corporate juggernaut is a significant percentage drop in petroleum demand. Until that happens, incidences like this are simply going to be noted as a "cost of doing business", and no amount of pie-in-the-sky dreaming will change that.
I just heard an interview with a woman in Lac-Megantic who said they had never been worried about having a railway run though the middle of the downtown until about a year ago when big trains of up to 80 tank cars started coming through, and people started saying "what happens in a derailment?"
This was a bankrupt little line bought up by an American corporate vulture who was running a shoestring operation, a disaster waiting to happen. The local MP, Harper's Quebec lieutenant Christian Paradis, certainly had heard all about it from local citizens; and he had lunch on Friday in the very Musi-Café that was incinerated 12 hours later.
Mulcair has been on the case right away, and rightfully so.
Some troubling facts concerning Lac Megantic as reported on CBC:
- 5 dead, 40 missing in Lac Megantic
- the number of rail cars carrying oil has increased astronomically from 500 in 2009 to 140,000 for 2013 (estimated) - a 28,000% increase in 4 years - due to oil pipeline capacity having been reached and in order to move oil to refineries as Canada continues to rapidly expand its oil production
- Transport Canada which is responsible for rail (and airline) safety cut 30% under Conservatives
- railway safety self-regulation has steadily expanded under several governments and rail accident rates increased dramatically due to conflict of interest between profits and safety
- up to 100,000 barrels of oil have contaminated nearby Chaudiere River from accident
I feel horrible about what happened and the lives this disaster has destroyed, so I don't mean to be indelicate. However, I believe an uncomfortable question needs to be asked. Had the train been carrying wind turbines instead of oil, how different would the outcome of the crash have been? Something for the anti-wind lobby to consider.
The oil was destined for the refinery here in Saint John. The mayor and local industry have been lobbying for a west-east pipeline terminating in Saint John.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/story/2013/07/08/nb-train-derailment-oil-pipeline.html
I know a little bit about railways as my grandfather and father worked for their entire lives on the railway and my first job was working on the railway. The kind of tanker rail cars used to transport this oil significantly increased the rapidly growing risk of an accident as rail transport of oil has expanded from 500 to 140,000 cars since 2009.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/production+exceeds+pipeline+capacity+ex...
The rapid growth in oil transport by rail has a corporation looking at building a rail line through northern BC to transport oil from Valdez Alaska to Asia. This is being done quietly in order not to arouse fears amongst the public. People need to start demanding transparency about this, especially after the Lac Megantic accident and the turning over of rail safety to the railways by our governments.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/production+exceeds+pipeline+capacity+ex...
The Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway, which is a subsidiary of the railway holding company Rail World Inc., was the railway involved in the Lac Megantic accident. Rail World Inc.'s "purpose is to promote rail industry privatization by bringing together government bodies wishing to sell their stakes with investment capital and management skills" (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rail_World,_Inc.). The record of privatization and anti-unionism of this firm fits hand-in-hand with this accident.
Edward Burkhardt, who is president and CEO of Rail World Inc., has been involved in the running of privatized or bankrupt railways in Canada, the US, Australia, New Zealand, Britain, Estonia and Poland, running them on the cheap.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/07/07/us-train-railroad-profile-idUS...
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/ct-met-rail-world-president-201...
http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/07/08/mulcairs-train-crash-comments-sl...
I have no illusions about how difficult bringing change in this area will be. However, I have to disagree with the statement that "The only thing that will change that corporate juggernaut is a significant percentage drop in petroleum demand." If people in the 15th century had assumed changing the system was impossible, we could still be living in feudalism. If people in the colonies of the world's empires had taken this approach in the 18th, 19th and 20th century, North and South America, Ireland, and much of Africa and Asia would still be colonies of various empires.
In May 2013, people in 436 cities in 52 countries protested against Monsanto and GMO crops and foods. Within two weeks two US states passed GM food labeling legislation and 20 others are now considering it. GM labeling is already mandatory in the European Union because of public pressure.
Waiting for the corporations to change is like waiting for Godot. He ain't coming. This is a long-term process. On the other hand, an uninhabitable planet is forever.
Change is already occurring.
On the other hand, North America is slipping behind.
However, the Americans are at least spending enough money to rank number 2 in terms of individual countries' green energy spending. On the other hand, Canada's resource-based, fossil fuel economy is in danger of becoming a fossil both economically and environmentally.
Is this enough spending and regulation to solve the problem? No. However, the issue is starting to be addressed in some countries and without further public pressure around the world, we do not have any chance of solving this problem.
Below is a video of Tom Mulcair's CTV comments on the accident.
http://montreal.ctvnews.ca/mulcair-slams-harper-over-lac-megantic-blames...
I thought his comments were done in a respectful and sensitive manner as he stated his first thoughts were with the families of Lac Megantic and then raised the questions of government cuts to transport safety and self-regulation of safety by the railways in a moderate tone of voice. Leave it to the MSM to use the comments of the Cons and Liberals as the basis for the headlines and articles about his comments.
It amounts to lip service as long as everyone still jumps in their cars, trucks, SUVs, busses, airliners, go on cruises ... buy goods made of plastic ...
I admire your optimism but I see it as naive.
BTW interesting article in the Gazette:
http://www.montrealgazette.com/Mégantic+Montreal+Maine+Atlantic+Railway+chairman+certain+train+that+exploded+tampered+with/8631093/story.html
It will be tremendously interesting to see what comes out of any investigations.
There are now 13 confirmed dead and an estimated 50 missing because of the Lac Megantic accident. DNA will have to be used to identify many people as their bodies are burned beyond recognition.
http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/a9gantic+explosion/8625646/story.html
Saying nothing can be done is a great excuse for doing nothing. Tell it to your grandchildren. (When Prime Minister Jan Smuts was asked in 1924 what could be done about the terrible conditions faced by Black South Africans his answer was "Nothing").
Yes, and the transition out of oil, and carcentric society, won't be made by some kind of angels with clean hands. I'm more familiar with what is going on in Europe, but many current and former autoworkers are writing cogent critiques of carcentric planning; and after all, it will take massive investment in public transport to emerge from that disaster.
I'm also very annoyed by people who say, oh your bicycle still pollutes because it was made in a factory (mine was made in a factory at least 40 years ago, and I see lots of bicycles of similar vintage around here) or that Internet pollutes (thanks, I know that) or that my (small) computer is made of plastic and other polluting compounds. Yes, we have to be aware of that, and I am; I recycle everything I can and buy second-hand when it is up to my professional needs, but I don't have a shadow of the footprint of households in huge houses with huge unused lawns (if only they gardened them!) and three cars, and some fancy motorized toys.
We aren't saints, and can't be under capitalism, but we can make choices, and mobilize to make the needed change.
Given the myriad of different hazardous materials that pass unnoticed by train through our populated areas, big and small, I find the media's focus on how oil should be moved (and this thread's diversion into a very important but totally unrelated issue) to be disturbing.
The more important focus, in my opinion, and once the horror of the human loss at Lac-Mégantic has been fully understood and dealt with, is: 1) Why do we allow trains, owned and operated for profit by largely U.S. privateers, to haul anything they please through areas where we work and live? 2) When will some political party stand up to the private transportation multinationals and their enablers (the Liberals and Conservatives) and boldly say:
"The deregulation of transportation, culminating in the offloading of safety management from government to the companies themselves, is officially OVER. The minute we're elected, it shall be the people who decide, dictate, inspect, and enforce. Not the profiteers."
Hard to imagine, isn't it? Why would anyone vote for a party that says, if you can't haul it safely to our standards, you will not haul at all? Buncha radical crazies, that would be.