upper waypoint

Video: How Chevron Richmond Fire Happened: Feds Release Blow-by-Blow Animation

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Scene from U.S. Chemical Safety Board Animation of August 2012 Chevron refinery fire: Here, a firefighter uses a steel pike to try to dislodge insulation from a leaking pipe in the crude-processing unit that was soon to catch fire. See full animation below.
Scene from U.S. Chemical Safety Board Animation of August 2012 Chevron refinery fire: Here, a firefighter uses a steel pike to try to dislodge insulation from a leaking pipe in the crude-processing unit that was soon to catch fire. See full animation below.

If you live downwind of Chevron's Richmond refinery, you don't need to be reminded of what happened there last Aug. 6: A huge fire started in a crude-oil processing unit at the facility, sending an immense plume of thick black smoke over adjacent neighborhoods and much of western Contra Costa County.

In what seems like a miracle, no one in the refinery died when a fireball erupted around the affected processing unit. But the fire sent thousands of local residents to hospitals, mostly with respiratory complaints.

The U.S. Chemical Safety Board issued a draft interim report last week detailing its findings on the accident It's a 70-page document that's filled with technical descriptions and jargon: "The incident occurred from the piping referred to as the “4-sidecut” stream, one of several process streams exiting the C-1100 Crude Unit Atmospheric Column." Passages like that, replete with references to industry standards and diagrams and charts in the report, might prove impenetrable to many readers.

But the board also produced something that's much more accessible to the public: an animated re-creation of the event. High-end Hollywood production values? No. A chilling sequence of events? Yes. The animation graphically lays out the consequences of the company's repeated delays in upgrading corrosion-prone steel components in this part of its refining process. And -- wait till you get to the part showing the firefighter poking a leaking pipe with a steel pike -- the video also makes clear that the personnel sent to figure out what to do about the leak had very little idea of the danger they faced.

Sponsored

lower waypoint
next waypoint
Newsom Says California Water Tunnel Will Cost $20 Billion. Officials and Experts Say It's Worth ItDavid DePape Sentenced to 30 Years in Federal Prison for Attack on Nancy Pelosi's HusbandFederal Judge Orders New Sentencing Hearing for David DePape in Trial Over Pelosi AttackProsecutors to Push for Terrorism Enhancement in Sentencing of David DePape, Who Bludgeoned Paul Pelosi in 2022UC Santa Cruz Academic Workers to Strike Over University's Treatment of Pro-Palestinian ProtestersSonoma State University's Deal With Student Protesters in Limbo After President's RemovalDutch Research Team Recounts the Long-Term Effects of StarvationSome Bay Area Universities Reach Deal to End Encampments, but Students Say Their Fight ContinuesEighth-Grader's Call to 911 About Teacher's Outburst Causes StirHighway 1 to Big Sur Has Reopened — What to Know About Visiting from the Bay Area