Author Topic: Fires Blazing, Untold Number Trapped Under Massive China Blast Wreckage  (Read 595 times)

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rangerrebew

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Devastating

08.13.151:05 AM ET

Fires Blazing, Untold Number Trapped Under Massive China Blast Wreckage

The giant explosion that knocked Tianjin residents off their feet has left at least 44 dead, firefighters missing, and an unknown number under the rubble—and the fire’s not out yet.

The devastating blast that rocked the Chinese city of Tianjin late Wednesday night may have looked like a mushroom cloud, but it wasn’t nuclear.

That, so far, is one of the only things that’s clear about the 11:30 p.m. explosion, which was so big that a Japanese weather satellite had a clear (infrared) view of it from space. As the fires burned, secondary explosions were triggered near the initial blast, in an industrial area of a port filled with warehouses and shipping containers that were likely housing flammable material.

The pillar of flame billowed higher than the nearby high-rise buildings, and residents up to a mile away were knocked off their feet as the shockwave swept through Tianjin’s Binhai District. The China Earthquake Administration registered the blast at a magnitude of 2.3.

Thirty minutes later, a second, even more powerful blast was set off, registering a magnitude of 2.9. Authorities say it had a force roughly equivalent to 21 tons of TNT.




The giant explosion that knocked Tianjin residents off their feet has left at least 44 dead, firefighters missing, and an unknown number under the rubble—and the fire’s not out yet.

 
Even after dawn, fires were still burning at the blast site. Firefighters lost contact with at least 36 of their own as they battled to put out the flames, and at least 12 have been killed.

CCTV, China’s state-run news service, reported that at least 44 people died in the blast, and at least 520 were hospitalized, 66 of whom are in critical condition. An unknown number are still trapped under the wreckage, and rescue efforts are under way.

Photos from early Thursday morning by Beijing News show rows of parked cars with their paint burned off, tires melted, windows shattered. Office buildings nearby remain as skeletal structures.




The giant explosion that knocked Tianjin residents off their feet has left at least 44 dead, firefighters missing, and an unknown number under the rubble—and the fire’s not out yet.

 
Tianjin, a major commercial port of about 7 million people 70 miles from Beijing, is a key base for the production of petrochemicals, automobiles, and heavy industry.

And Ruihai International Logistics, which operated the warehouse where the explosion originated, is authorized to handle hazardous materials, which has fueled speculation that the blast was a chemical explosion. The company moves around 1 million tons of cargo a year.

Police first detained one representative of Ruihai Logistics for questioning in an effort to determine the cause of the blast. Then, on Thursday morning local time, company executives were taken into police custody.

Residents in Tianjin said the air in the city after the explosion had a disturbing odor, and they worried they could be inhaling harmful fumes. Local reports, however, rated the air quality at five monitoring stations in Tianjin as “normal” after the blast. Unconvinced, some residents left the city, leaving behind homes with shattered windows, caved-in roofs, the constant blare of sirens, and, in some cases, no power or water.
 
Shortly before 10 a.m. on Thursday two more explosions shook the Tianjin blast site.
 

Four hundred others, many wearing face masks to filter the noxious air, visited hospitals where the injured are being treated to donate blood. Some drivers are volunteering their time and services to ferry family members of the victims to hospitals.

The authorities, said Chinese President Xi Jinping, must “make a full effort to rescue and treat the injured, and ensure the safety of people and their property.” The mayor of Tianjin has been at the blast site since the explosion and has announced that his three goals are to control the situation, rescue the victims, and discover the cause.

While Chinese industry is taking steps to improve its image and operation—the reviews of government officials are now tied to pollution levels in their jurisdiction, and some industries are increasingly using robots to remove the possibility of human error—poor safety standards still plague the country. In July, an illegally operated fireworks warehouse in Hebei Province exploded, killing 15 people. One year ago, a blast killed dozens at a factory that made automobile components for U.S. firms.

Shortly before 10 a.m. on Thursday two more explosions shook the Tianjin blast site.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/08/13/fires-blazing-untold-number-trapped-under-massive-china-blast-wreckage.html
« Last Edit: August 13, 2015, 08:39:47 am by rangerrebew »

Offline flowers

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Re: Fires Blazing, Untold Number Trapped Under Massive China Blast Wreckage
« Reply #1 on: August 13, 2015, 09:44:30 pm »
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-33844086

Tianjin blast: Images reveal extent of devastation