Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan train derailment cars same as those in Lac Megantic disaster

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Oct, 2014 11:47 AM

    WADENA, Sask. - CN Rail says the tanker cars that derailed and caught fire this week near a small community in Saskatchewan are the same type as those involved in the Lac Megantic disaster last year.

    Jim Feeny says the Class DOT-111 rail cars are owned by shippers or leasing companies and CN has no choice but to accept them.

    Almost three-quarters of the tanker cars used in North America are 111s.

    Feeny says regulators on both sides of the border have laid out a time frame to replace the older cars, but it will take time.

    "We are on record as favouring a very aggressive phase-out of the older model DOT-111s, but we are required to accept these cars at this point," Feeny told radio station CKRM Thursday.

    "We are required to operate them. We have no choice in that matter. We are calling on the industry and the federal government to phase them out, but the fact is, there are many of them, and it will take time to do this."

    Both CN and CP have said they are already phasing out or retrofitting their fleet.

    Dozens of people had to leave their homes this week in Clair, Sask., and surrounding area when 26 cars derailed and two of them carrying petroleum distillate caught fire.

    Forty-seven people were killed when a runaway train carrying crude oil barrelled down a hill, derailed and exploded in downtown Lac Megantic in July 2013.

    The Association of American Railroads has recommended that the 111s used to transport flammable liquids be retrofitted or phased out and wants a reinforced standard for new tank cars.

    The 111 car is considered the workhorse of the North American fleet and makes up about 70 per cent of all tankers on the rails. The cars have a service life of between 30 and 40 years.

    Since October 2011, all new tanker cars have been built to safer specifications. But there is a long backlog on new car orders because there are only a handful of manufacturers in North America.

    A government-commissioned report has said there are about 228,000 DOT-111 cars in service throughout North America. About 92,000 of them carry flammable liquids.

    About 26,000 reinforced models have been put into service and that's expected to rise to 52,500 next year.

    Adam Scott, a spokesman for the advocacy group Environmental Defence, said Canada has seen an exponential growth in the amount of oil travelling by rail.

    "The rail system was not designed with public safety in mind for that much oil," said Scott, who added that the DOT-111 cars are generally used.

    "They have well-documented safety problems," he said. "They are very thin and in crashes they do tend to leak and explode."

    Scott said freight rail lines "actually go right through the centre of almost every major urban centre in the entire country including small towns ... so the risk of accidents is significant."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Brunswick Recounts confirming election night results

    New Brunswick Recounts confirming election night results
    Three recounts have confirmed the voting results on election night in New Brunswick, nearly two weeks after the polls closed.

    New Brunswick Recounts confirming election night results

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne touts good-jobs goal at work summit

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne touts good-jobs goal at work summit
    TORONTO - Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says her government shares the labour movement's goal of creating good jobs, while cautioning the two sides may have some differences of opinion about how to get there.

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne touts good-jobs goal at work summit

    Former insurance CEO returns money from contract

    Former insurance CEO returns money from contract
    WINNIPEG - Manitoba Public Insurance says its former CEO has returned money she received from a "transitional contract" she signed earlier this year.

    Former insurance CEO returns money from contract

    Churchill Man who saved woman from polar bear gets Manitoba's highest honour

    Churchill Man who saved woman from polar bear gets Manitoba's highest honour
    WINNIPEG - A man who was himself mauled when he saved a woman attacked by a polar bear has received one of Manitoba's highest honours.

    Churchill Man who saved woman from polar bear gets Manitoba's highest honour

    No cover for PM Stephen Harper if Iraq mission goes bad

    No cover for PM Stephen Harper if Iraq mission goes bad
    New Democrats and Liberals refused Friday to support Harper's decision to join in airstrikes against the extremist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), which has been committing atrocities in northern Iraq.

    No cover for PM Stephen Harper if Iraq mission goes bad

    B.C. Government Apologizes For Firing Co-op Student Who Killed Himself

    B.C. Government Apologizes For Firing Co-op Student Who Killed Himself
    VICTORIA - The allegations were serious, a stern-faced British Columbia health minister announcing that seven employees had been fired and the RCMP had been called in to investigate a collection of data breaches.

    B.C. Government Apologizes For Firing Co-op Student Who Killed Himself