Remembering the West Texas Fertilizer Plant Explosion
It was a typical spring evening with temperature s around 80 degrees on the evening of April 17, 2013 in central Texas. Humidity that evening was low with scattered clouds and 20 mile per hour winds blowing in from the south south east (SSE).
At around 7:30 that evening in the City of West, an explosion occurred at the West Fertilizer Company plant. An explosion so powered it registered as a 2.1 magnitude earthquake and felt over 80 miles away damaging many homes and school throughout the area.
At this time, dispatched received a 911 call reporting smoke coming from the West Fertilizer Company plant and at 7:34 PM, the West Volunteer Fire Department was dispatched to the scene with two engines, a brush trick and tender responding to the scene along with two more firefighters arriving in their personal vehicles. The first arriving unit on scene was at approximately 7:39 PM confirming a structure fire at the plant and deployed an initial attack line (1 1/2 attack line) to extinguish any and all visible fire and to establish a water supply using a 4-inch diameter supply line. Please note, the nearest fire hydrant was more than a quarter mile away from the scene. An initial mutual aid alarm was struck with included an aerial ladder truck and four more firefighters which responded in their personal vehicles.
Within 12 minutes of the initial arriving unit on scene and 22 minutes from the initial 911 dispatch, an explosion occurred at the plant leaving multiple firefighters down.
Ten first responders were killed in this explosion due to an estimated 40 to 60 tons of ammonium nitrate exploding just outside the city limits.
Five firefighters from the West Volunteer Fire Department were killed in the explosion along with four firefighters from 3 neighboring departments along with one off-duty career fire captain and two civilians who offered assistance to the fire department on scene.
Factors of the incident
The department did not recognize the hazards associated with the ammonium nitrate
There was limited pre-planning of the facility
Rapid fire spread in wood construction commercial structure with no sprinkler system
Post incident recommendations as per NIOSH
Fire departments should conduct pre-incident planning of buildings within their jurisdiction to facilitate the development of safe fireground strategies and tactics especially in high hazard high risk structures
Fire departments should have a written management plan, use risk management principles at all structure fires and especially at incidents with high risk hazards
Fire departments should implement and enforce the Incident Management System (IMS) at all emergency operations
Fire departments should ensure all firefighters wear personal protective equipment appropriate for the assigned tasks
Fire departments should ensure all firefighters are training to the standards that meet or exceed NFPA 1001 Standard for Fire Fighter Professional Qualifications
We remember:
Firefighter Morris Bridges
Firefighter Cody Dragoo
Firefighter Joseph Pustejovsky
Firefighter Douglas Snokhous
Firefighter Robert Snokhous
Firefighter Jerry Dane Chapman
Firefighter Cyrus Reed
Firefighter Kevin Saunders
Fire Captain Harris Kenneth
Firefighter Perry Calvin