Flixborough Disaster
Flixborough Disaster
Flixborough Disaster
What?
The Flixborough disaster was
an explosion at a chemical plant close to
the village of Flixborough,England on 1
June 1974.
How?
The chemical works, owned by Nypro UK
(a joint venture between Dutch State
Mines (DSM) and the British National
Coal Board (NCB)) had originally
produced fertiliser from by-products of
the coke ovens of a nearby steelworks.
Since 1967, it had instead
produced caprolactam, a chemical used
in the manufacture of nylon 6. The
caprolactam was produced from
cyclohexanone. This was originally
produced by hydrogenation of phenol,
but in 1972 additional capacity was
added built to a DSM design in which hot
liquid cyclohexane was partially oxidised
by compressed air. The plant was
intended to produce 70,000 tpa (tons per
annum) of caprolactam but was reaching
a rate of only 47,000 tpa in early 1974.
Government controls on the price of
caprolactam put further financial
pressure on the plant.
It was a failure of this plant that led to
the disaster. A major leak of liquid from
the reactor circuit caused the rapid
formation of a large cloud of flammable
hydrocarbon. When this met
an ignition source (probably a furnace at
a nearby hydrogenproduction plant)
there was a massive fuel-air explosion.
The plant control room collapsed, killing
all 18 occupants. Nine other site workers
were killed, and a delivery driver died of
a heart attack in his cab. Fires were
started on-site which were still burning
10 days later.
Lessons
Bhopal Disaster
What?
The Bhopal disaster, also referred to as
the Bhopal gas tragedy, was a gas
leak incident in India, considered the
world's worst industrial disaster. It
occurred on the night of 23 December
1984 at the Union Carbide India
Limited (UCIL) pesticide plant in Bhopal,
Madhya Pradesh. Over 500,000 people
were exposed to methyl isocyanate
(MIC) gas and other chemicals. The toxic
substance made its way in and around
the shanty towns located near the plant.
How?