Canadian Tragedy

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I was saddened to read this morning that a train with a load of crude oil derailed and caught fire in Lac-Mégantic, Canada, and I started writing this post. I heard during the afternoon there was one person killed, and more may still be found. In addition, the oil spilled into the Chaudière River. And most curiously, the derailment wasn’t from overspeed or failed brakes or a crash or the usual stuff. Instead, the train took off on its own and committed suicide … go figure.

The train had been parked and the conductor was not aboard when “somehow, the train got released,” Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway, Inc Vice President Joseph McGonigle said on Saturday.

“We’re not sure what happened, but the engineer did everything by the book. He had parked the train and was waiting for his relief,” McGonigle said. The Star

railroad tank car explosion canadaFigure 1. Derailed tank cars, Canada SOURCE

In addition to the human compassion we all feel for the folks to whom these tragedies occur, plus hoping that no train workers or hobos were hurt, the crash sparked off a boatload of thoughts about the absolute need for storable transportable energy; about the inherent dangers of concentrated stored energy; and about how we move stored energy around the planet.

First, energy is synonymous with development. Our civilization requires huge amounts of it. Without the ability to extract, move, and store immense amounts of energy, we’re literally back to the Bronze Age, where wood melted the bronze and cooked the food. I’ve tried living at that level, it’s not my idea of a good party. Plus, if everyone burns wood for energy the world will look like Haiti … so we’ll take the need for some kind of storable energy as a given.

Next, stored energy is inherently dangerous. If you accidentally drop a wrench across the terminals of a car battery, it could cost you your life … and that’s just a car battery, not a railroad tank car full of crude oil. If stored energy gets loose, it is immensely dangerous.

The materials in which the energy is stored are also often, as in this case, a danger to the environment. If you think electricity solves the problem, crack open a car battery and consider the toxicity of the chemicals and heavy metals involved.

Finally, there are more dangerous and less dangerous ways to transport energy.

Arguably the least dangerous way to transport energy is in the form of electricity. We move unimaginably large amounts of energy around the world with only occasional injuries and fatalities. Don’t get me wrong, a 440,000 volt power line is not inherently safe. But we are able to locate our electric wires in such a way that we don’t intrude into their space, and vice versa.

But that’s just moving electrons. If you have to move the molecules, the actual substance itself, things get more hazardous.

In terms of danger, railroads aren’t the most dangerous. That’d be the fuel trucks carrying gasoline, diesel, kerosene, and propane on the highways. Plus of course the stored energy in the fuel tanks of the cars and trucks involved in every crash. If you consider an electric power line transporting energy running alongside a freeway, with each vehicle transporting stored energy in the form of liquid fuel, and how often lives are lost or damage done from the power lines, versus how much damage the stored energy does when a tanker truck crashes and catches fire on the freeway, you’ll get a sense of what I’m talking about.

I’d put railroads as the second most dangerous way to move energy. This for a couple reasons. One is because people built along the railroad tracks, and cities grew up around the rail hubs. This means you’re moving things like crude oil and gasoline, each of which stores huge amounts of what was originally solar energy, through highly populated areas.

Another is that a railroad tank car stores a huge amount of energy. A tank full of crude oil hold about 820 barrels of oil, which conveniently has about the same energy as a thousand tons of TNT. Of course, normally this energy is released slowly, over time. Even if the tank ruptures and the fuel pours out, the release of energy occurs over tens of minutes.

However, the fuel is contained in enclosed tanks. As in this case, if fire is raging around an intact tank car, it heats the tank until the contents start boiling. Depending on the fuel involved, if the vapor pressure of the contents is high enough, the tank can rupture in what is called a BLEVE. That stands for “Boiling Liquid Expanding Vapor Explosion”, and it was the cause of death in boiler explosions in old-time Mississippi steamships. When a boiling liquid under pressure suddenly experiences an instantaneous pressure drop, the entire body of the liquid can directly flash into vapor. With a steam engine the liquid is water, and the resulting steam from an exploding boiler was incredibly lethal and destructive. Now, consider a BLEVE of a flammable liquid … instead of making an expanding ball of steam, you get an expanding ball of fire.

At that point, the “kilotonnes of TNT” is no longer a metaphor.

So what is safer than a railroad? Well, on land there are pipelines, and at sea there are tankers. The tankers are dangerous for the environment, but given the amount of energy moved per year, the spills are not numerous. Obviously, as a sailor and a commercial fisherman I’d prefer there’d be no spills … but energy is synonymous with development, and stored energy is inherently dangerous. So all we can do is continue to improve the safety of the tankers, and stay aware of the dangers. Having worked in the industry, I know the many safety regulations surrounding tanker ships. These regulations are indeed numerous and cover the situation well … and despite that, there is always more to learn.

On land, pipelines have an excellent safety record. People are generally unaware of how many pipelines there are in the US. Here are the trunklines that just move crude oil, including from Canada:

crude oil trunk pipelinesFigure 2. Crude oil trunklines SOURCE 

Figure 3 shows the major pipelines for “refined products”, meaning gasoline, diesel, and the like:

major refined products pipelinesFigure 3. Pipelines carrying refined products. SOURCE

Finally, Figure 4 shows the pipelines carrying gas, both within and between the states:

major gas pipelinesFigure 4. Gas pipelines, from the EIA

Considering the very large number and length of the pipelines, the number of accidents per year is very, very small. Like electrical lines, we generally don’t notice (or even know) that these pipelines exist, but they move huge amounts of many kinds of both crude and refined products all over the US.

Which brings me to the final thought brought up by the Canadian train derailment.

There is a proposed expansion of the KeystoneXL Pipeline, to handle an increased amount of heavy crude from Alberta. Opponents of the expansion think that stopping the pipeline expansion will somehow stop the flow of Canadian heavy crude into the US. This is not true for two reasons.

First, the existing Keystone pipeline is already bringing Alberta heavy crude into the US. The expansion will just, well, expand that amount.

More to the point, however, is the fact that large amounts of Alberta heavy crude is also being moved into the US by railroad. And not by just any railroad. It’s mostly coming in on the Burlington Northern Railway.

And by what can only be considered an amazing coincidence, the Burlington Northern Railway is owned by a major Obama donor. And by an even more amazing coincidence, the major donor bought the BNR just three years ago.

And this was not just any major Obama donor, but Mr. Warren Buffett, a key money supplier for the Obama re-election effort …

Now of course, the longer that Mr. Obama can delay approving the Keystone Pipeline, the longer the oil will be moved by Mr. Buffet’s railroad. I’m sure you can predict what Mr. Buffet wanted for his investment in the Obama campaign, those guys don’t pitch in the big bucks without wanting something …

And very likely Buffett learned early on, during Obama’s first administration, that Obama would block the pipeline, which is probably why he bought it. Buffett is many things but he’s no fool. Will we ever be able to prove that chain of events? Don’t be naive, Buffett is  immensely wealthy for a reason. He doesn’t leave tracks, he doesn’t show his cards, he plays everything close to the vest. We won’t find any smoking guns on this one.

I find it quite amazing. In the late 1800s, the railroads were major players in the political scene, and no one made an important decision without first kissing the rings of the railroad barons.

And now, more than a hundred years later, we still have a President kissing the ring of a railroad baron before making his decision.

So … don’t expect any quick resolution by President Obama of the Keystone Pipeline issue. Every day it is delayed, hundreds of thousands of dollars flow into Warren Buffet’s pockets.

And US politics continues to fashion in the old, time-tested way … money talks. And even in this modern time of emails and smartphones, I’m glad to know some of the most valuable hoary, ancient US political traditions have been kept alive.

And when I say valuable traditions … I mean very, very valuable. These days, being a friend of Obama is worth big bucks.

Finally, we see that the claims by the opponents of the pipeline that they are trying to “protect the environment” are simply not true. If they were really concerned about the environment, they’d want the KeystoneXL pipeline expansion. It is much more dangerous to the environment to move the Alberta heavy crude by railroad tank car than by pipeline … and the tragedy in Canada is an excellent example of why.

And a happy Independence Day weekend to all,

w.

PS—In any case, if the pipeline is blocked, the Alberta heavy crude will still be burned, either shipped to China, or shipped to the US and Buffett will be even richer, or burned in Canada, but it will be burned. That’s the crazy part—the opposition to the pipeline, even if successful, will achieve nothing … welcome to the crazy world of modern environmental NGOs and their followers …

Get notified when a new post is published.
Subscribe today!
0 0 votes
Article Rating
198 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Justthinkin
July 7, 2013 11:08 am

Number 1….this is NOT a tragedy. More people died in less time on the highways around Montreal.
Number 2…if you want to count this as a tragedy,the tragedy is that eco-nuts think transporting 100k of volitile fuel per 50k car at 50-60 mph that crosses many roads and goes through many towns,is safer than a pipeline,then that is a tragedy.
Number 3….regardless of what the company says,it was not crude.Crude does not explode like that.There was more than crude in some of those tankers.
Number 4….a parked train does not just take off and reach those speeds by itself,unless using pixie dust and unicorn farts,especially a frieght of that size,on a level grade?
Number 5….follow the money. Buffet against Tides.

July 7, 2013 11:25 am

U.S. President Obama is holding up approval of the Keystone XL pipeline project primarily due to his concern that the approval would contribute to global warming. We calculate that the approval of the Keystone project could contribute to 0.0002 °C warming in 50 years, based on incremental greenhouse gas emissions estimated by the U.S. State Department. See my article at:
http://www.friendsofscience.org/index.php?id=234
and our news release July 3, 2013 at:
http://www.friendsofscience.org/index.php?id=207

Gail Combs
July 7, 2013 11:35 am

Kasuha says:
July 7, 2013 at 8:53 am
Well, well, well. Look who’s here paid by Big Oil.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
You mean like Warren Buffet, a key money supplier for the Obama re-election effort don’t you?
Warren Buffett /Berkshire Hathaway’s 15 Biggest Stock Holdings
BIG OIL
ConocoPhillips
Phillips 66
BANKS
US Bancorp
American Express
Wells Fargo
MEDIA
Liberty Media (LMCA)

Liberty Media Corporation owns interests in a broad range of media, communications and entertainment businesses. Those interests include subsidiaries Atlanta National League Baseball Club, Inc., TruePosition, Inc. and Sirius XM Radio Inc., interests in Live Nation Entertainment, Inc., Barnes & Noble, Inc., and Charter Communications, and minority equity investments in Time Warner Inc., Time Warner Cable Inc. and Viacom Inc…. http://www.libertymedia.com/asset-list.aspx

The Washington Post
(Buffett’s Berkshire Buys 29th Daily Newspaper, The Roanoke Times)
DirecTV
Int’l Business Machines (IBM)
Wal-Mart Stores
Coca-Cola
General Motors
Moody’s
DaVita (DaVita is the dialysis division of DaVita HealthCare Partners Inc., a Fortune 500® company that, through its operating divisions, provides a variety of health care services to patient populations throughout the United States)
Procter & Gamble
15 May 2013 Berkshire Hathaway has eliminated its holdings of two stocks: Archer Daniels Midland and General Dynamics
This is interesting in light of this older headline 8/04/2010 ADM profits soar 550 percent as ethanol margins improve Remember David Archibald’s post about the US corn crop….
General Dynamics is an aerospace and defense company.
Warren Buffet also just bought the Antelope Valley Solar Projects. This is the project where the government cheated people out of their homes by using zoning regs to make them tear down their homes so the land could be acquired for pennies on the dollar. link

PK
July 7, 2013 11:37 am

on the north american continent trains use the “westinghouse airbrake system or compatibles (in the case of passenger and non interchanged rolling stock).
that is a pair of resevoirs (service and emergency) under the car are charged to ~ 115 psi with compresssed air. they are fed from a pipeline that is connected to the other cars in the train and the locomotive. the engineer does this with the locomotives whenever he is ready to move the train out onto the main line. it can take quite a while to do this. when the train line is up to pressure he performs a “standing airbrake test”. that is he applies the brakes a small amount and a person hanging around the back end of the train obseves the action. if all is proper he releases the brakes and moves off. as soon as he gets the radio message “all are moving” (remember they are running 10,000 foot trains these days) he applies the brakes again for the “running airbrake test” and observes his controls for proper operation. HE APPLIES THE BRAKES BY LOWERING THE AIR PRESSURE IN THE TRAINLINE. if the train line loses pressure the brakes throughout the train clamp onto the wheels with the full pressure of the air in the emergency resevoir.
this is a super short explanation of the operation of train brakes. it does not address independent brakes, dynamic or hand brakes which are horses of another color.
runaway trains have happened for more than 200 years on the railroads. the people that run them are not dumb and have taken many many more steps to combat them than a bunch of amateurs on a sunday afternoon can speculate on. they have had to many people killed by defective brakes and runaways not to be serious about it. it is quite common for teen age boys to assist “tied down trains” to run away (you see it in the trade press about every two years)
i believe this to be sabatoge. remember the duck anthology. if it walks like a duck, flaps like a duck, waddles like a duck, swims like a duck, quacks like a duck, flies like a duck its probably a duck no matter what a greenie trys to tell you.

Gail Combs
July 7, 2013 11:52 am

R. de Haan says: July 7, 2013 at 9:07 am
Gail Combs …
If you don’t believe in death trains, accidents like this could change your mind. However accidents involving trains, trucks, aircraft, boats, tankers, but also storage systems tank farms and pipelines filled with carbon fuels always pose a risk….
>>>>>>>>>>>>
Believe me I am a chemist and very well aware of that given I have seen four plant accidents(fires and explosions) from organic chemicals and just missed a fifth because I was on vacation. I have been known to go after plant managers and even CEOs about safety hazards. I even go after grocery stores that do not have the helium tanks properly chained to a wall or bench.
I have also driven semi’s so I know about the fail safe that will not let you move if anything is wrong with the air brake system.
Stopping on a hill with a load of flammables is going to make the driver extra cautious unless he is on chemicals or very very tired. Even then you are going to go through the automatic routine since it is ingrained, sort of like waking up from deep thought to find yourself in your driveway at the end of a long day with no memory of how you got there.

a jones
July 7, 2013 12:26 pm

PK says:
July 7, 2013 at 11:37 am
Yes Sir you are correct. variants of the Westinghouse system are pretty well universal today. although the British stuck to their vacuum system well into the late 20th century. They also, uniquely I believe, ran unbraked [no continuous automatic brake {CAB}] coal trains of up to 800 tonnes or so until the 1970s: these relied solely on the locomotive brakes backed up by heavy brake vans. Tor prevent the dangers of runaways on ascending gradients they used catch points at the bottom of the hill to derail the runaways if the train couplings broke.
The problem with any pneumatic system is that once the train is parked there will be leakage eventually causing the brakes, CAB, to release. To prevent runaway some kind of mechanical brake is usually used but as you say runaways still happen if these fail for whatever reason.
ATTN Willis
I too was surprised at your calculation of energy release but it is correct. That is because you are using bbl, a volume measure, against weight, kilotons. In fact the weight of oil depending on what it is. is of the order of 140 tonnes or so. perhaps a seventh of the weight of TNT for the same energy release. That is hardly surprising, any explosive has to carry it’s own oxidant and so weighs much more than a fuel which gets it’s oxygen from the atmosphere.
Hence the development of liquid fuel bombs some thirty years ago which spray the fuel into the air before detonation giving a devastating air blast for their weight.
Kindest Regards

mike g
July 7, 2013 12:47 pm

Willis Eschenbach says:
July 7, 2013 at 10:55 am
mike g says:
July 7, 2013 at 6:50 am
Willis, check you math. I have that 820 bbl of oil equivalent is approximately equal to 1 ton of TNT, not a kiloton.
Seemed high to me too when I first calculated it, so I checked it several ways.
Several sources give 4.184E+9 joules per tonne of TNT.
Several sources give 5.8E+9 joules per bbl of oil equivalent.
And UnitJuggler does the conversion directly here, just put in 820 barrels.
Of course, the destructive power of the TNT is much, much greater since it all detonates in milliseconds … either one is still a lot of power, though.
w.
You are correct sir. I was checking your numbers because it seemed high to me, too. I actually have the same numbers on my spreadsheet that you had and somehow concluded you were off by a factor of 1000 even though I came up with a number identical to yours.

July 7, 2013 1:05 pm

Comparing Warren Buffet to a 19th century railroad baron, while entertaining, is a little fanciful. The balance of power today is surely reversed – Buffet was kissing Obama’s finger by donating to his campaign. Obama had his own reasons for blocking the pipeline anyway.
And maybe we shouldn’t feel too bad about this cosy little arrangement. As Willis notes, if the pipeline isn’t built, then the oil will just have to come in by rail. In which case, it’s proabably just as well that the railroad is under the control of someone with the commercial savvy of a Warren Buffet than someone with the commercial savvy of, say, a Barack Obama.
Warren Buffet didn’t vote Obama into the White House, the American people did.

PiperPaul
July 7, 2013 1:05 pm

We just have to wait for the investigation to finish.
That will take a year, and by then the population at large won’t collectively remember and the MSM won’t care. Oh, look! Squirrel!

July 7, 2013 1:18 pm

Eschenbach, re general statements.
I quote from your “previous thread” that you so conveniently linked to above,
“He also doesn’t do citations. Roger does blanket statements.”
Here, the “He” that is mentioned is me. The “Roger” referred to is also me. Eschenbach was grousing, but I’m sure in a loveable way, of course, what else! that ALL of my writings are merely blanket statements with no citations, Of course, as I pointed out, Eschenbach is a liar on this point.
So, in the mind of the Great Eschenbach, it is some sort of crime for Sowell to not do citations, but to provide blanket statements. Hypocrite, Eschenbach. Hypocrite. I merely point out your hypocrisy, in your very next guest post here on WUWT.
I do agree with you on one thing, however. Your posts are highly entertaining. Thank you for waking up each morning, walking outdoors, and reporting back breathlessly on what most of us have known for a very long time. Pipelines are more economic than rail transport? Seriously? Hold the phones, I must send this along right away to all the oil companies. They will be shocked, shocked, I tell you!
What is next from the pen of the Great Eschenbach? Did the sun rise in the east? Did a wave break on the shore? Now, that’s news!
To paraphrase your own words, you just keep on entertaining those in the cheap seats. If this needs a citation, I refer interested parties to Eschenbach’s previous guest post on WUWT. There, he confesses that he writes to educate and entertain those in the cheap seats. Seriously, that’s what he said. So, now we know.

dmacleo
July 7, 2013 1:22 pm

loco’s separating so early on is what bugs me, only reason I can see of that is due to the independent brake being applied suddenly or the consist gaining enough speed to cause the break away from them already being applied.
alerter tossing train into emergency would cause them to apply suddenly, however I would expect it to have been parked with ID brake on but I don’t know their policy. I don’t know MM&A retainer rules either.
I am wondering if the prior fire on loco possibly damaged hoses causing a leak but seems to me it would have been seem on the res/pipe gauges.
just not enough info and everything is pure speculation at this point.

Dena
July 7, 2013 1:25 pm

I am not saying this is what happened, but it shows how the rail safety feature can fail under the right conditions.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CSX_8888_incident

Andyj
July 7, 2013 1:42 pm

Kasuha says….
“…”
Obviously another unthinking, partly brain dead septic skience reader/activist who’s green activist “friend” let the train roll?
I say,
“Look who’s paid by big government”.
I also say to Gov’t. Beware of the monsters you create. Monsters are known to turn onto their masters and handlers.

RockyRoad
July 7, 2013 1:50 pm

Roger Sowell says:
July 7, 2013 at 1:18 pm

….
There, he confesses that he writes to educate and entertain those in the cheap seats. Seriously, that’s what he said. So, now we know.

Jeeze, Roger–NONE of us pay to belong to or utilize WUWT, so by that measure we’re ALL in the “cheap seats”.
However, that doesn’t mean we don’t learn an awful lot from those posting here, and I’ve identified and learned and laughed and cried more from Willis’ posts than anybody.
And your posts? I’ve learned nothing yet, except what to avoid.
Now please grow up, take your meds, or go away. Your choice.
Or do you want Anthony to take a vote by the readership here and see what a true concensus looks like in this comment battle?
Thanks, and have a good day, Roger. No ill will, mind you, except that which you should extinguish in yourself.
PS> You never did answer my question to you, which I posted twice, under Cooking Grandma.

Duncan
July 7, 2013 1:58 pm

Roger. You are not endearing yourself to anyone. You are looking like a troll. Try bringing something to the party not just moaning about the quality of the drink provided by others.

Mr Green Genes
July 7, 2013 2:02 pm

Willis – I’ve learnt so much from people such as yourself on here. It’s nice that for once I can contribute something useful.
Roger Sowell – just don’t. You demean yourself with postings like your contributions on this thread.

Jeremy
July 7, 2013 2:25 pm

Check this out
http://www.350maine.org/train_blockade
Train Blockade
350 Maine and Maine Earth First coordinated a rail blockade in Fairfield, Maine on Thursday, June 27th. Trains carry fracked crude oil from the Bakken Oil fields of North Dakota, through Maine to Irving’s Oil Refinery in Saint John, New Brunswick. The transport is dangerous for communities all along the rout. The rail owner, Pan Am has had two train derailments since 2012, one of which was carrying 15 cars of Bakken Crude. The Maine DEP spokesperson said the fact that so little oil spilled was “a miracle.”
Dozens demonstrated and six were arrested after refusing to leave the tracks. A crowd of local citizens gathered, many of whom expressed support for the demonstration.
350 Maine Organizer Read Brugger was one of those arrested. “Industry and governments should rapidly scale down the use of fossil fuels in response to climate change. But because of greed and dwindling global reserves, they are instead pursuing ever more destructive methods of extraction,” he said.
This appears to be part of the same railroad system as the one with the explosive accident which took place about 100KM – could be entirely coincidental.
http://panamrailways.com/Maps/Map.pdf

Jeremy
July 7, 2013 2:28 pm

It would appear that the protesters were extremely prescient about the possibility of an accident, the railroad companies have had derailments before. Most likely a case of, “I told you so” rather than anything sinister.

Jeremy
July 7, 2013 2:30 pm

More details on the train blockade
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/06/28-0

Robert in Calgary
July 7, 2013 2:58 pm

Roger Sowell, You’ve been pwned, accept it.
Turn off your computer and have your tantrum in private.

A. Scott
July 7, 2013 3:06 pm

All I did was rank them by relative safety. I did not “smear these methods [truck and train] as unsafe”.
I just ranked them in rough order of safety.
w.

Fair enough Willis … and in this case “smear” wasn’t intended to negatively reflect on you … was late and just didn’t have a better word at the time 😉

rogerknights
July 7, 2013 3:07 pm

Woody55 says:
July 7, 2013 at 9:13 am
I believe Buffet’s investment in rail was based on a view that ,over the longer term, energy prices would increase and rail would have an economic advantage over truck based transport of goods.

Or that’s his cover story. Or anyway only part of the truth.

Plus the rail assets were priced at a level that provided a good return on investment.

BN was definitely not bargain-priced.