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Clean Hydrogen Partnership

LH2 release during transfer at an aerospace company

Event

Event ID
1220
Quality
Description
A liquid hydrogen leak occurred at the aerospace company (high Tier Seveso).
The facility is specialised in production and handling of cryogenic propellants for engines of space vehicles.

A 53 m³ liquid hydrogen road tanker had just been unloaded, its bottom valve closed, and the transferring hoses were being purged, when the portable gas detectors of the personnel on site triggered an alarm, indicating a hydrogen concentration in the air above 10% of the lower explosive limit (LEL). At the same time, operators observed a flow of liquid from a hose and white plumes of vapor emanating from the rear of the tank.

The bottom valve of the tanker was not completely closed, resulting in a leak of liquid hydrogen upstream and downstream, particularly in the flexible hose, causing a flow along the surface of the hose due to the liquefaction of ambient air in contact with its uninsulated, cold surface.
A second effect was a higher than usual release rate of hydrogen through the vent stack of the unloading area, leading to the detection of hydrogen by portable detectors. The detection was facilitated by the prevailing meteorological conditions, because the wind was blowing the hydrogen emissions from the stack towards the operators.
The white plumes observed behind the tank were caused by the atmospheric conditions that day, which was cold and humid with a low dew point, favouring the vaporisation of liquid air and the condensation of air moisture.

The emergency stop was activated, the facility shut down for safety and the area sprinkled with water.
To bring the tank back to a safe state, the operator:
(1) Opened the automatic valves of the tanker to direct the hydrogen to the main safety flare. This reduced the pressure in the road tanker and thus decreased the leak flow rate upstream / downstream through the incorrectly closed bottom valve.
(2) Injected helium downstream of the bottom valve to dilute the hydrogen release and to warm the valve. This allowed the bottom valve to be properly closed and the facility to be returned to a safe configuration.

Once the operations were completed, the emergency plan was deactivated approximately 7 hours later. Nobody was injured.
Event Initiating system
Classification of the physical effects
Unignited Hydrogen Release
Nature of the consequences
Leak No Ignition (No additional details provided)
Macro-region
Europe
Country
France
Date
Main component involved?
Valve (Generic)
How was it involved?
Rupture
Initiating cause
Ice Formation
Root causes
Root CAUSE analysis
The INITIATING CAUSE was the only partial closure of a tank valve, which leaked liquid hydrogen once the hose was disconnected.

The bottom valve of the tank had only partially closed. There valve had probably experienced an unexpected low temperature during the unloading process, leading to the formation of an ice plug of unknown composition, causing a mechanical blockage. This may have been exacerbated by a loss of vacuum in the double-walled enclosure of the valve or the piping to which it was attached.

The ROOT CAUSE was probably a material failure, but a mistake in the execution of the transfer procedure cannot be excluded either.

Facility

Application
Hydrogen Transport And Distribution
Sub-application
LH2 tanker
Hydrogen supply chain stage
Hydrogen Transfer (No additional details provided)
All components affected
valve, hose
Location type
Open
Location description
Industrial Area
Operational condition

Emergency & Consequences

Number of injured persons
0
Number of fatalities
0
Post-event summary
Only damage was the loss of hydrogen and the loss of time during the emergency (7 hours)
Official legal action
The French Bureau of Investigation and Analysis for Civil Aviation and Land Transport Safety (BEA-RI) has opened an investigation to determine the circumstances of the event.

Lesson Learnt

Lesson Learnt

Clogging of valves working with liquid hydrogen is not an uncommon phenomenon, cause by solidification of air or other gases at temperatures approaching the liquid hydrogen temperature. If the valve has safety role, such as a pressure relief valve, the partial or total blocking of the flow can have safety-related consequences (ee for example the extreme case of HIAD_609). However, the valve in this case had the main function to allow the flow of liquid hydrogen from the tank to the stationary storage system via a hose. All other safety-related systems functioned as designed.

Event Nature

Release type
liquid
Involved substances (% vol)
H2 100%
Release duration
unknown
Actual pressure (MPa)
1
Design pressure (MPa)
1
Presumed ignition source
No ignition

References

Reference & weblink

Event no.63410 of the French database ARIA <br />
https://www.aria.developpement-durable.gouv.fr/accident/63410/<br />
(accessed December 2024)

News on the site of Face-au-risk<br />
https://www.faceaurisque.com/2025/01/30/fuite-hydrogene-arianegroup-bea… />
(acessed September 2025)

JRC assessment