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Page added on October 18, 2015

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Hauling crude oil may be causing train tracks to fail

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The only sign of trouble aboard a Norfolk Southern train, hauling roughly 9,000 tons of Canadian crude in western Pennsylvania last year, was a moderate sway in the locomotive as it entered a bend on the Kiskiminetas River.

The first 66 cars had passed safely around the curve when the emergency brakes suddenly engaged, slamming the train to a stop. The conductor trudged back nearly a mile through newly fallen snow to see what happened.

Twenty-one cars had derailed, one slamming through the wall of a nearby factory. Four tank cars were punctured, sending 4,300 gallons of crude pouring out of the tangled wreckage.

The cause of the accident in North Vandergrift was identified as a failure in the rails — not aging or poorly maintained tracks, but a relatively new section laid less than a year earlier.

The February 2014 crash fits into an alarming pattern across North America that helps explain the significant rise of derailments involving oil-hauling trains over the last three years, even as railroads are investing billions of dollars in improving the safety of their networks. A review of 31 crashes that have occurred on oil trains since 2013 puts track failure at the heart of the growing safety problem.

Track problems were blamed in 59 percent of the crashes, more than double the overall rate for freight train accidents, according to a Los Angeles Times analysis of accident reports. Investigators and rail safety experts are looking at how the weight and movements of oil trains may be causing higher than expected track failures.

The growing number of trains hauling crude oil from Canada and the Northern Plains are among the heaviest on the rails today, many extending more than 100 cars in length and weighing 19,000 tons or more.

Not since the early days of John D. Rockefeller’s oil trust have railroads played such a central role in moving oil from wells to refineries. Oil shipments by rail have soared — an eighteenfold increase between 2010 and 2014 — as domestic oil production has escalated faster than the construction of new pipelines to carry it to market.

Concerns about the safety of hauling crude began to rise after the horrific Lac-Megantic accident in Quebec, Canada, in July 2013 that left 47 people dead and the city’s downtown in ruins.

The Federal Railroad Administration is preparing in coming weeks to issue a new set of initiatives to address the track problems, after previously clamping tighter restrictions on tank car designs and railroad operations. But solving the track problems could be a formidable challenge.

Sarah Feinberg, chief of the Federal Railroad Administration, said the agency is working hard to improve safety, but preventing accidents that result from defective track involves finding a needle in every haystack along thousands of miles of track.

“We have been incredibly lucky that the accidents have happened mostly in rural areas,” she said. “Some of them have been very close calls.”

The crashes have occurred as the nation’s railroad system is being asked to do more than at any time in history, putting additional wear and tear on the tracks. Since 2001, railroads have seen a modest 12 percent increase in the number of cars they haul, but a 24 percent jump in the more comprehensive measurement of cargo that looks at the weight and train mileage the system has to bear, known as ton-miles, according to industry data.

Though railroads have significantly improved safety in general, the oil train accidents are a worrisome trend in the opposite direction and not fully understood.

Of the 31 crashes involving crude or ethanol since 2013, 17 were related to track problems and 12 a mix of other causes. The cause of the two other crashes remains unclear. The count is based on final or preliminary government and railroad investigations that were collected by The Times under the Freedom of Information Act or in U.S., Canadian and railroad company filings.

About two-thirds of the accidents resulted in spills, fires or explosions, a record that has already prompted regulators to demand stronger tank cars and other safety measures.

Weight, oil sloshing and cold temperatures are among the issues that might be exacerbating the problem, according to rail safety experts.

Investigators at Safety Transportation Board Canada, which is examining the eight accidents that have occurred in that country, are beginning to suspect that the oil trains are causing unusual track damage.

“Petroleum crude oil unit trains transporting heavily loaded tank cars will tend to impart higher than usual forces to the track infrastructure during their operation,” the safety board said in a report this year. “These higher forces expose any weaknesses that may be present in the track structure, making the track more susceptible to failure.”

Back in the U.S., Rick Inclima, safety director at the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees, said that oil trains also could be creating unique stresses on the track. “You can certainly get some rhythmic forces in … oil trains that you might not see on a mixed freight train with cars of different sizes, weights and commodities,” he said.

The major U.S. railroads are investing record amounts of money to upgrade their tracks and improve safety. The seven class-one railroads, which haul the majority of the nation’s freight, are spending $29 billion this year on their systems, nearly double the level of 2001, according to the American Assn. of Railroads. The trade group did not have any response to The Times analysis of oil train accidents, though it said its member companies exceed federal requirements for inspection and safety.

But that has not eliminated the problem. While all types of derailments dropped 17 percent over the last three years, there are still more than three every day across the country, involving trains carrying a variety of freight, according to federal safety data. Bad track accounts for about 27 percent of overall accidents, less than half the rate of track problems contributing to oil train accidents.

Though railroad technology may seem antiquated in a digital age, it relies on incredible precision to control monstrously heavy loads. The track in North Vandergrift, Pa., where the Norfolk Southern accident occurred, carries about 30 million tons of freight every year.

The relentless pounding plays havoc with any metallurgical flaw. Wooden ties deteriorate as they age. And other track components crack.

The freight tracks in the U.S. and most of the world are supposed to be 56.5 inches apart, a width known as the gauge. Just 3 inches of movement can cause a derailment. And even if tracks conform to federal standards, they can separate under the force of a heavy train.

“Wide gauge” is the single largest cause of accidents involving track defects.

La Crosse Tribune  


15 Comments on "Hauling crude oil may be causing train tracks to fail"

  1. makati1 on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 7:23 am 

    No money to keep rails in repair, because the Military Industrial Complex doesn’t sell them or need the railroads.

  2. paulo1 on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 9:00 am 

    I wonder at the quality of the steel, now that so much is recycled product of Chinese source? Pot metal rails? What is the quality control systems in place?

  3. paulo1 on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 9:02 am 

    is/are…fixed it.

  4. makati1 on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 9:56 am 

    paulo1, many of the rails in the US system are as old as I am, and many are older. I do not remember EVER seeing any being replaced in my lifetime on any of the lines near my house. Bethlehem Steel made most of them up until the 90s at least although it went out of business in 2003.

    I doubt that the Us buys foreign rails or connector plates. I could not find any evidence that they buy outside the Us. I know they don’t buy the manganese frogs (where rails cross at an angle) and switches as they are still made at the foundry where I worked 50 years ago. I suspect that it is just poor maintenance and under funding by the government.

  5. Davy on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 10:19 am 

    The U.S. Has the finest freight rail system in the world. Google it makster and you will see. It also has the worst passenger rail system which goes with the territory of being a hyper car culture.

  6. BobInget on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 10:23 am 

    Why pipelines will be approved, eventually.

  7. penury on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 11:02 am 

    No the solution is to ban pipelines, pass laws that prevent the train shipment of oil, close all ports to the export of this dangerous substance, and then riot when there is a shortage of fuel. Its all perfectly logical. ask anyone.

  8. Pennsyguy on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 11:56 am 

    Plan A: Let low oil price due to failing economies kill the U.S. Light-Tight Oil industry. Problem solved.

  9. Ralph on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 2:52 pm 

    Here in the UK ties have been concrete , and rails have been welded, not bolted together, for decades. I miss the ‘clickety-clack’ from the days of my childhood.

  10. idontknowmyself on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 4:02 pm 

    Paolo said : I wonder at the quality of the steel, now that so much is recycled product of Chinese source?

    Judging by how long my front brake rotor last and how fast they rust and lose alignment I would say really cheap steel. Steel are now mainly made of recycle steel. Natural resource depletion is really apparent to me as an old man. Steel products are now of the lowest quality I can remember. Car mechanics don’t bother turning used rotor because the metal is too cheap and they prefer to put new rotor instead. That what my local car mechanics told me.

    I remember a time when it was standard practice to turn an used rotor and reused it with new brake pad. Natural resources depletion is evident everywhere.

  11. apneaman on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 4:13 pm 

    America’s Infrastructure GPA: D+

    Rail C+

    http://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/a/#p/rail/overview

  12. makati1 on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 8:50 pm 

    Ap, the rating is probably correct, though that is an average of all railroads, etc., I suppose. But the constant bursting of water lines, bridge closures and rail accidents points to an increasing failure to maintain.

    Over all, the average is about a D+. How can the number one exceptional country have such a low score in the areas that are important and yet claim to be the best country in the world? Arrogance? Definitely!

  13. makati1 on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 9:51 pm 

    The Us is #1…

    “America #1? 36 Facts That Prove That The United States Is An ‘Exceptional’ Nation”

    http://endoftheamericandream.com/archives/america-1-36-facts-that-prove-that-the-united-states-is-an-exceptional-nation

  14. Apneaman on Sun, 18th Oct 2015 10:12 pm 

    That gosh darned fracking sure has wrassled up a passel of trouble.

    State shuts 33 wells injecting oil wastewater into aquifers

    “California regulators on Thursday closed 33 oil company wells that had injected wastewater into potentially drinkable aquifers protected by federal law.

    The new closures bring to 56 the number of oil-field wastewater injection wells shut down by the state after officials realized they were pumping oil-tainted water into aquifers that potentially could be used for drinking or irrigation.”

    http://m.sfgate.com/business/article/State-shuts-33-wells-injecting-oil-wastewater-6574845.php

  15. rockman on Mon, 19th Oct 2015 7:01 am 

    “The new closures bring to 56 the number of oil-field wastewater injection wells shut down by the state after officials realized they were pumping oil-tainted water into aquifers that potentially could be used for drinking or irrigation.” Fortunately the state regulators are finally doing their job. BTW none of those 33 injection wells were disposing frac fluids.

    Another couple of facts for those who only read the headlines: 12 of the 33 wells were inactive and not injecting anything. And all 33 wells were initially approved by the state regulators and were legally injecting into their target zones. They only later changed the rules.

    And as far as the 178 PERMITTED wells that are injecting into “relatively high water quality” zones the article states “More than 2,000 other wells inject into aquifers that would be harder to use for drinking water, either because they are too salty or because they also contain oil.” Yeah, a bit more than 2,000 wells: as of 2010 the actual count was 47,809 injection wells. So 0.3% of the wells that were once permitted by state regulators are now being reconsidered for suspension. IOW 99.7% of the existing injection wells are not considered a potential hazard by either the state or the feds.

    And a few more FACTS from this same article: The division reported Friday, however, that not all 178 wells required closure. Some had already been shut down by their operators, while others had been converted into wells for extracting oil — not dumping wastewater.” So even the 0.3% is an over estimate. Also, according to the CA Dept of Conservation with respect to those 178 wells: “…no drinking water supplies have been found to be tainted by the injections. And of course there’s this: “The new closures bring to 56 the number of oil-field wastewater injection wells shut down by the state after officials realized they were pumping oil-tainted water into aquifers that potentially could be used for drinking or irrigation.” IOW those 58 wells WERE NOT INJECTING into aquifers that are currently being used for drinking or irrigation. One has to wonder why during such a drought those aquifers weren’t being used, eh?

    Rather amazing what FACTS surface when you read the entire article and not just the headlines. LOL.

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