Canadian Manufacturing

Explosion at former BP gas plant in Mississippi was felt 16km away

by Bill Fuller, The Associated Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Environment Operations Risk & Compliance Oil & Gas


The natural gas plant, located near Pascagoula, Miss., had just been sold to the minority owner, Enterprise Products Partners L.P., from majority owner BP.

JACKSON COUNTRY, Miss.—Two explosions and a fire rocked a natural gas plant in southern Mississippi on June 27, but authorities said no one was injured.

Emergency Management Director Early Etheridge in Jackson County said the first explosion occurred at 11:30 p.m. and was followed by a larger explosion minutes later. Etheridge said the second blast could be felt up to 10 miles away. Flames continued burning through the evening.

“The two workers on duty were in a safe room at the time of the two explosions and were not injured,” Etheridge said.

“The explosion and fire which followed has heavily damaged the processing area,” he said.

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Firefighters continued to stream water on the fire.

“What’s burning now is residue in the lines,” he said. “We aren’t sure how long it will continue to burn.”

The plant located near Pascagoula had just been sold to the minority owner, Enterprise Products Partner L.P., from majority owner BP.

Company spokesman Rick Rainey said the Houston-based company had owned 40 per cent and BP 60 per cent.

“Once the fire is out, we’ll launch an investigation into the cause of the explosion and fire,” Rainey said.

The Mississippi plant removes the liquid from natural gas and ships it to utilities along the East Coast, Rainey said. The liquid is then sent to other plants where propane and butane are produced.

“We do not know at this time how long with plant will be offline,” Rainey said.

He said the plant has a capacity of 1.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day, but the plant was nowhere near its capacity.

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