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Clean Hydrogen Partnership

Explosion at a water treatment facility

Event

Event ID
1080
Quality
Description
This incident occurred when subcontractor two workers were widening air vents on the roof of a building hosting a tank containing hydrogen chloride solution. This intervention was necessary to to improve hydrogen venting from the tank storage area. The hydrogen gas was a by-product of the chlorine-making process.
The two workers were operating an angle grinder, producing sparks which ignited the flammable atmosphere which evidently containing hydrogen. An explosion followed, with one casualty and one injured worker.
The HSE, in charge of the investigation, concluded: "The company failed to take adequate steps to prevent the risk of an explosion occurring during the construction work that was taking place at the plant near to a source of hydrogen gas."
Event Initiating system
Classification of the physical effects
Hydrogen Release and Ignition
Nature of the consequences
Macro-region
Europe
Country
United Kingdom
Date
Main component involved?
Chemical Storage Tank (Hcl)
How was it involved?
Internal Explosion (H2-Air Mixture)
Initiating cause
Inadequate Or No Purge
Root causes
Root CAUSE analysis
The incident inquiry by the Health and Safety Executive found that the water service company was to blame for management shortcoming in risk assessment, safety measures implementation, operative procedures, and management of external workers. The workers were unaware of the existence of hydrogen gas or the hazards involved, and that they did not see any health and safety or danger signs on the building.

Facility

Application
Other
Sub-application
waste management
Hydrogen supply chain stage
All components affected
vent, tank
Location type
Confined
Location description
Industrial Area
Operational condition
Pre-event occurrences
The involved tanks were originally installed as an open-air facility, which was self-venting. However, the company decided to create a building around it, to avoid exposure to the elements.

Emergency & Consequences

Number of injured persons
1
Number of fatalities
1

Lesson Learnt

Lesson Learnt

These were the findings of the forensic investigation:
(1) The explosion occurred because of a build-up of hydrogen in the ducting beneath the roof, likely ignited by the grinder.
(2) The plant should have been shut down.
(3) No permit had been given for the work being carried out.
(4) A specific risk assessment should have been carried out, but had not been done.
(5) The area should have been verified safe, for example by means of gas detectors.
(6) Safety and hazard warning signs would have helped, but none were present on the roof of the building, and that there were very poor communication channels.
(7) That tanks involved should not have been enclosed (they were originally installed as an open-air facility, which was self-venting. However, the company had decided to create a building around it. to avoid exposure to the elements).
(8) Gas detectors should have been provided.
(9) The workers should have been supervised by the plant operator.

Event Nature

Release type
gas mixture
Involved substances (% vol)
H2,
Cl2
Presumed ignition source
Mechanical sparks

References

Reference & weblink

Irish Times news of 6 Dec 2006<br />
https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/arid-30288410.html<br />
(accessed aug 203)

BBC news of 7 Dec 2006<br />
https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/arid-30288410.html<br />
(accessed aug 203)

PSI Database ENSAD<br />
https://www.psi.ch/en/ta/ensad<br />
(not online since 2024)<br />

JRC assessment