DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Blast kills 23 outside China factory in Olympic city
By Elizabeth LAW
Zhangjiakou, China (AFP) Nov 28, 2018

A truck carrying combustible chemicals exploded at the entrance of a chemical factory in a northern Chinese city that will host the 2022 Winter Olympics Wednesday, leaving 23 people dead and 22 others injured, state media and authorities said.

The blast ignited other vehicles, leaving charred and smoking remains of trucks and cars scattered on a road as firefighters worked at the scene, according to images posted online by state media.

A witness told AFP he heard a "very loud bang" after midnight and saw a field and trucks engulfed in flames outside the factory in Zhangjiakou, a city some 200 kilometres (124 miles) northwest of Beijing.

The side of a building was covered in soot in front of a row of burnt out trucks across the road, footage broadcast by CCTV showed following the latest deadly incident to hit a factory in China.

The blast damaged 38 trucks and 12 cars, the local propaganda department said on its Twitter-like Weibo social media account.

The injured were taken to hospitals for treatment following the blast at 00:41 am, according to the department. The death toll rose from 22 to 23 later in the day after another body was found, according to the city government.

The factory's and exterior archway were blackened. Across from the blast, AFP reporters saw a field of blackened grass and trees, with smoke billowing from the embers. Heavy machinery was brought in to remove debris.

A truck carrying acetylene blew up when entering the plant, igniting nearby vehicles, according to the official Xinhua news agency, which cited a preliminary investigation.

Rescue efforts and the investigation were still underway, Xinhua said.

The Zhangjiakou propaganda department said the blast occurred near Hebei Shenghua Chemical Co., but Xinhua later reported that it happened at the entrance of nearby Haipo'er New Energy Technology Co.

- 'A fireball' -

"It was after midnight when I put down my phone to go to bed when I heard a very loud bang, followed by a few more," said a man named Zhang who works in another chemical factory some 200 metres (yards) from the blast site.

"There was a shaking and two pieces of the ceiling fell. I thought it was an earthquake so I hid under a bed for a while," he said.

"When I looked out of the window I saw a large fireball sweep across the area," said Zhang, whose car was singed.

He awoke others in his dormitory and they ran to safety.

"Even the grass outside our factory was on fire, so we quickly put it out," he said.

Beijing is hosting the 2022 Winter Games, with some of the mountain sport competitions taking place on the outskirts of Zhangjiakou.

The explosion occurred in the city's Qiaodong district. Snowboard, cross-country skiing and freestyle skiing events will be held some 45 minutes away in Chongli.

- Industrial, road accidents -

Road and industrial accidents are common in China.

A blast at a chemical plant in southwest Sichuan province left 19 dead and 12 injured in July. The company had undertaken illegal construction that had not passed safety checks, according to local authorities.

In 2015, giant chemical blasts in a container storage facility killed at least 165 people in the northern port city of Tianjin.

The explosions caused more than $1 billion in damage and sparked widespread anger at a perceived lack of transparency over the accident's causes and its environmental impact.

bur-el-lth/mtp

Weibo


Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
A world of storm and tempest
When the Earth Quakes

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Navy participates in humanitarian, law enforcement exercise with Peru, Chile
Washington (UPI) Nov 26, 2018
The amphibious transport dock USS Somerset and the destroyer USS Wayne E. Meyer will conduct exercises in Ecuador, Peru and Chile as part of U.S. Southern Command's Enduring Promise Initiative. Three hundred Marines and sailors from the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Peru aboard the Somerset will train in humanitarian assistance and disaster relief with forces from the Peruvian navy, the U.S. Navy announced on Monday. Wayne E. Meyer will conduct exercises with the navy of E ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Blast kills 22 near China factory in Olympic city

Navy participates in humanitarian, law enforcement exercise with Peru, Chile

Morocco navy finds 15 migrants dead in stranded boat

US Army unfurls miles of fencing along border with Mexico

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
How to melt gold at room temperature

New technique to make objects invisible proposed

NRL demonstrates new non-mechanical laser steering technology

Combination 3D Printer will recycle plastic in space

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Drinking water sucked from the dusty desert air

How the Atlantic Ocean became part of the global circulation at a climatic tipping point

Ocean circulation in North Atlantic at its weakest

75-80 percent chance of El Nino in next 3 months: UN

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Local drivers of amplified Arctic warming

Is Antarctica becoming more like Greenland?

Antarctic melting slows atmospheric warming and speeds sea level rise

Antarctica's hidden landscape shaped by rivers in warmer era

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Floods ravage rice production in Niger's Diffa region

The tragedy of the commons - minus the tragedy

New biocontainment strategy controls spread of escaped GMOs

French wine market to shrink further, but organics surge: report

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Iraq floods leave 21 dead in two days: health ministry

More than 700 hurt in Iran quake

Sunset crater, San Francisco volcanic field

Seven dead in floods north of Iraqi capital

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Receding Malawi lake lays bare cost of climate change

Comoros displays captured 'rebel' arsenal

Dozen herders killed in clashes with hunters in Mali: mayor

Niger to move protected giraffes as habitat shrinks

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Chinese hospital denies approving gene-edited babies experiment

China orders probe into scientist claims of first gene-edited babies

Genetics summit holds breath for Chinese baby-editing details

China scientist claims world's first gene-edited babies