A series of seven large blasts on a fuel barge in Mobile, Alabama, rocked the area Wednesday night, critically injuring three. An evacuation zone was set up after firefighters were unable to put out the blaze.
The first blast occurred on a natural gas barge on the east side of the Mobile River at around 8:30pm local time, and was followed shortly afterwards by four more blasts. Fox10 News has reported that the barges may still be carrying hundreds of gallons of gasoline.
The explosions took place on two barges in the Austal shipyard, the Mobile Fire and Rescue Department reported. The vessels were transporting natural gas, and were believed to be partially emptied, according to Steve Huffman, a Mobile Fire-Rescue spokesperson.
Photo from @lagniappemobile Chief Photographer Dan Anderson: #mobileexplosion twitter.com/LagniappeMobil…
— Lagniappe (@LagniappeMobile) April 25, 2013
Authorities have ordered a one-mile evacuation zone around
the shipyard.
The initial blast was triggered by a static charge after crews
had been working throughout the day to empty the ship and prepare
it to transport gas Thursday. Subsequent explosions have made it
impossible for firefighters to board the ship and put out the
blaze.
Officials said that there were no fatalities, but three victims of the explosion were in critical condition after being admitted to the University of South Alabama Medical Center for treatment.
MFRD will have crews on the scene all night monitoring the fire on the 2 barges. A total of 6 explosions have occurred. 3 people injured.
— Mobile Fire-Rescue(@MobileFRD) April 25, 2013
The fifth explosion was reportedly the largest, coming an hour later, just moments after fire officials told reporters that a rumbling in the area was the sound of untreated gas pressurizing. The sixth explosion, about forty minutes after that, was first reported by witnesses and then confirmed by Mobile’s Fire and Rescue Department.
Local residents have reported hearing a seventh explosion around
2:00am local time in Mobile, according to Alabama
Press-Register.
“That [seventh] explosion shook all my windows,” Mobile resident
Johnny Gwin told local media.
The next morning, authorities said the fire has gone out at the site of the Mobile fuel barge explosions, AP reported. Earlier, firefighters said that they were hoping the fire would burn out overnight.
Just heard another explosion. Listening to the scanner. They immediately started doing a roll call. Sounds bad down there #bargeexplosion
— RobertOgden (@RobertOgden) April 25, 2013
Alan Waugh, the general manager of Ft. Conde Inn, told Fox10 News that the blast could be felt throughout downtown Mobile. The crew of a Carnival cruise liner, which was sitting in the water about 1,000 feet away from the blast site, has been evacuated, Channel 6 News reported. Parts of Austral, Alabama, have also been evacuated.Mobile’s Fire and Rescue Department said the tankers were carrying “raw gasoline, meaning no additives in the fuel,” and that tunnels in the area are still open and operating.
“We were up on a second floor balcony and the sky lit up in orange and yellow,” Waugh said. “My partner was on one end of the balcony and I was on the other. And you thought it was the Carnival cruise ship at first but then you realized it was a little further from the ship. It sounded like planes above you dropping bombs.”
My entire house is shaking with each explosion. #BargeExplosion
— Louisiana Belle (@LouisianaBelle_) April 25, 2013
Rescue teams estimated that one of the ships could be carrying as much as 2,000 gallons of natural gas.
The Coast Guard has closed the channel, and issued an order to restrict flights near the site. Red Cross volunteers are providing canteen services to hundreds of first responders and evacuees of the Mobile barge explosions.
Mobile Civic Center is packed with evacuees from #bargeexplosion - mainly #CarnivalTriumph crews, estimated at 800 twitter.com/SalArmyCoastAL…
— Salvation Army AL (@SalArmyCoastAL) April 25, 2013
Local residents have gathered at the riverfront to take pictures and watch the flaming barge, despite warnings from officials to stay away from the fire, according to the Alabama Press-Register.