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CONSUMER PROTECTION & PRIVACY »» DISASTER PROTECTION »» OIL TRAINS »» Mar 08, 2021
Oil transport trains have been involved in several fiery accidents that were caused by excessive speed, driver error, poor track conditions and inadequately-constructed tank cars. Most of the tank cars on our rails today are older, general-purpose tankers known as DOT-111s, each with a capacity of 34,500 gallons. For over 25 years, the National Transportation Safety Board has warned these cars are inadequate for transporting volatile liquids such as ethanol and Bakken crude oil, saying its steel shell is too thin to withstand puncturing during derailments, and its valves are prone to breaking off during rollovers. Newer model tank cars that were supposed to be safer have failed in every major oil and ethanol train derailment they have been involved in to date. In 2013, a runaway train carrying Bakken crude in DOT-111 cars derailed in Lac-M
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