Tougher inspection and maintenance standards for railroad
tracks could prevent dangerous derailments of trains carrying explosive crude
oil, officials of the rail inspectors' union say.
Lawmakers in Congress and rail regulators have focused
much of their attention on the strength of oil tank cars and the volatility of
Bakken crude oil, but track flaws and train speed can also be significant
factors in accidents.
"Let's see what we can do to keep the damn trains on
the track," said Rick Inclima, a member of the Federal Railroad
Administration's (FRA) Railroad Safety Advisory Committee and the safety
director of the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes.
"The solution is to prevent the derailment. When
they come off the tracks, bad things happen," Inclima said in an
interview.
Of 1,220 train derailments in 2014, 39 percent were
caused by track flaws, according to FRA data.
Railroad companies determine the state of track
inspection and maintenance, depending on how fast they want to run their
trains. The more stringent the inspection and maintenance standards, the faster
trains are permitted to travel.
The FRA sets the speed limits, based on track conditions.
Railroads can change the class of track (and so increase
or decrease the allowable speed) whenever they choose.
For freight trains, there are five classes of track.
On Class 1 track, which requires infrequent inspections
and allows more flaws such as defective ties and imperfectly aligned rails,
trains are not permitted to travel faster than 10 m.p.h.
On Class 5 track, with stricter maintenance and
inspection requirements, freight trains can travel up to 80 m.p.h.
Two major derailments last year involved oil trains on
Class 2 tracks, with track conditions poor enough to restrict top speeds to 25
m.p.h.:
On April 30, 2014, a CSX oil train derailed in downtown
Lynchburg, Va., creating a spectacular fire and oil spill that forced an
evacuation of part of the city.
Less than two weeks later, on May 9, six cars on a
100-car Union Pacific oil train derailed near LaSalle, Colo., about 45 miles
north of Denver, spilling oil near the South Platte River.
This year, on Feb. 16, a CSX oil train derailed and
exploded near Mount Carbon, W.Va., sending flames hundreds of feet into the air
and several hundred residents fleeing from their homes.
The West Virginia accident occurred on Class 4 tracks,
where the train was traveling below the 50 m.p.h. speed limit as it was coming
out of a speed-restricted curve.
"The key to reducing track-caused derailments is
maintaining the tracks to a higher safety standard," said Freddie N.
Simpson, president of the Maintenance of Way Brotherhood, the union that
represents about 35,000 workers who inspect and maintain railroads.
"Unfortunately, the railroads' own statistics speak
for themselves, and track-caused derailments - including those involving highly
volatile crude oil - continue to be a threat to the nation."
The union is urging the FRA to require that tracks used
by oil trains be maintained one track class higher, without a corresponding
increase in train speed. Or, the union says, train speeds should be reduced to
the speed limit of the next lowest class.
For example, oil trains would be limited to Class 2
speeds (25 m.p.h.) on tracks maintained to Class 3 standards (40 m.p.h.).
The union also is seeking requirements for faster repairs
of identified defects, with lower speed limits until the fixes are made.
"The industry arrogantly claims they cannot afford
to maintain the tracks to a higher safety standard," Simpson said.
"My question to the nation is, Can we afford for them not to?"
Norfolk Southern spokesman David Pidgeon said safety was
paramount at the railroad, but "any talk about slowing the trains down, we
have some concern about that."
"Slowing down one train can affect the entire
network. . . . It can have a serious impact on the delivery of other goods and
services," Pidgeon said.
He said Norfolk Southern was spending about $1 billion to
maintain and upgrade tracks and bridges this year.
"We don't want to be derailing. . . . We want, and
our shippers want, safe, reliable infrastructure."
The Association of American Railroads, which represents
major freight rail companies, noted that the industry had its safest year in
2014.
Without responding directly to the union's contentions,
AAR spokesman Ed Greenberg said railroads had spent $575 billion on
safety-enhancing rail infrastructure and equipment since 1980, with an
additional $29 billion scheduled to be spent this year.
"The freight railroad industry shares the belief
that there is no greater priority than safety," Greenberg said. "It
is always our goal to make a safe network even safer, and as FRA data shows,
2014 was the safest year for train accidents in railroad history."
CSX spokesman Rob Doolittle said safety was that
railroad's "highest priority, as evidenced by our extensive efforts to
maintain our infrastructure, train our employees, and collaborate with first
responders to make sure they're prepared to respond to train-related
incidents."
Doolittle said CSX inspections on oil train routes
exceeded federal standards, with visual inspections at least three times a
week; track geometry inspections two to three times a year; and ultrasound
inspections (used to identify internal defects in the rails) on a schedule that
ranges from 31 to 123 days.
Electronic trackside monitors have been installed to
search for defects in railcars, and a nationwide speed limit of 50 m.p.h. has
been set for CSX oil trains, Doolittle said.
Other major railroads, including Norfolk Southern, also
limit oil trains to 50 m.p.h.
On April 17, acting FRA administrator Sarah Feinberg
issued an emergency order restricting trains to 40 m.p.h. in urban areas if
they are transporting flammable liquids, including crude oil.
Major freight railroads had agreed last year to a similar
limit, and in many cities, including Philadelphia, oil trains already travel
more slowly.
The FRA has proposed other regulations to address oil
train safety, including a stronger tank-car design and better braking systems.
The proposal is under review at the White House, and final regulations are
expected to be released next month.
Source: Philly.com
No comments:
Post a Comment