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Clean Hydrogen Partnership

Explosion in a chemicals plant

Event

Event ID
1209
Quality
Description
An explosion occurred in a plant producing organic chemistry products, in an autoclave located near a distillation column for acetone and oxygenated solvents. The explosion was followed by a fire involving the facility.
Internal and external firefighters were mobilised. Site activity was stopped and personnel evacuated. The fire was brought under control in few minutes, by means of fixed installation water hoses and water curtains to protect neighbouring facilities. The whole emergency lasted approximately 1 hour.

During a general maintenance shutdown the previous month, the operator had repaired a valve belonging to the hydrogen network and located upstream of the autoclave. It is assumed that a residual leak through the repaired valve or a handling error made during the maintenance operation caused the presence of hydrogen in the autoclave.
The activities aiming at restarting the autoclave had just begun, and during flushing of the autoclave, the hydrogen escaped through the vent and ignited upon contact with air, causing a deflagration outside the equipment. An observer noted the orange colour of the flame, which could be due to the presence of organic residues in the autoclave.
Event Initiating system
Classification of the physical effects
Hydrogen Release and Ignition
Nature of the consequences
Macro-region
Europe
Country
France
Date
Main component involved?
Valve (Generic)
How was it involved?
Rupture
Initiating cause
Material Degradation (Generic)
Root causes
Root CAUSE analysis
The INITIATING CAUSE was the accidental release of hydrogen from the autoclave due to the malfunctioning of a valve.

The ROOT CAUSE could be attributed to the lack of in-depth risk assessment of the autoclave operation. The procedure of restarting the autoclave was following a fixed series of step, without safety checks. Probably the action of purging the autoclave with nitrogen had been considered safe enough, and further risk analysis deemed unnecessary.
Furthermore, the absence of a pressure gauge on the autoclave made it impossible to detect the increased in pressure in the autoclave caused by the leak. The report proposes also the possibility of a human error causing the valve to release hydrogen into the autoclave, but it remains a hypothesis.

Facility

Application
Chemical Industry
Sub-application
Basic chemicals products
Hydrogen supply chain stage
All components affected
valve, autoclave
Location type
Open
Operational condition
Pre-event occurrences
The autoclave operatios were restarting after the reair of a hydrogen feed line.

Emergency & Consequences

Number of injured persons
0
Number of fatalities
0
Environmental damage
0
Post-event summary
No personal injury, no property damage reported.
Probably the damage was very limited. The palnt restarte operations one week later.

Lesson Learnt

Corrective Measures
The operator planned to:
Formalise an operating procedure including a risk analysis for non-routine and complex operations.
• Add a pressure gauge to the autoclave.
• Perform leak tests of the valve in question.

Event Nature

Release type
gas
Involved substances (% vol)
H2 100%
Release duration
unknown
Presumed ignition source
Not reported

References

Reference & weblink

Prefet de la Savoie, Rapport de l'Inspection des installations classées - Visite d'inspection du 22/10/2024 Contexte et constats: <br />
https://georisques.gouv.fr/webappReport/ws/installations/inspection/1OX… />
(accessed September 2025)

Event no.62875 of the French database ARIA <br />
https://www.aria.developpement-durable.gouv.fr/accident/27273/<br />
(accessed December 2024)

JRC assessment