Thank god you guys have stringent regulation and oversight over there... Morons always fall for misdirection...
meh gods a useless fuckwit.Thank god you guys have stringent regulation and oversight over there...
lol thank you for bringing it up. this accident was a much smaller scale, no one died and beatifully shows the need for better oversight by inspectors[video=youtube;7Q1yrbw4Ihk]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Q1yrbw4Ihk[/video]
Investigators found that Chevron did not apply inherently safer design principles and upgrade piping in the unit over 10 years, leading to extreme corrosion that ultimately made the pipe rupture and release a vapor cloud that ultimately caught fire, endangering 19 workers who had narrowly escaped moments earlier, CSB said."Chevron failed to replace critical sections of piping in the crude oil unit over a 10-year period," CSB Chairman Rafael Moure-Eraso told reporters at an Apr. 15 briefing in the Northern California community. "This incident would not have occurred if it had followed its own internal regulations to implement improved technology."
If Chevron had done this, or if government regulators had required it to implement safer technology, it would have upgraded critical crude unit sidecut piping years ago from carbon steel to metallurgy more resistant to sulfidation corrosion, the draft report said. Such a material upgrade could have prevented the accident, it added.
"Chevron had resources, time, and technical expertise to know the risk. However, there was no effective intervention before an accident could occur," Moure-Eraso said. "Make no mistake: The ultimate issue is not corrosion, but how to make effective corporate decisions. Regulators also need effective tools and resources to encourage companies to make the right choices."
"Chevron had resources, time, and technical expertise to know the risk. However, there was no effective intervention before an accident could occur," Moure-Eraso said. "Make no mistake: The ultimate issue is not corrosion, but how to make effective corporate decisions. Regulators also need effective tools and resources to encourage companies to make the right choices."
The CSB draft report said that even when rebuilding the crude oil unit after the August 2012 release and fire, Chevron did not install what the CSB considers inherently safer stainless steel piping in the destroyed distillation tower, choosing instead, with no documented inherently safer technology review, an alloy called 9-Chrome that is more corrosion-resistant than carbon steel but less resistant than stainless steel.
no one is saying accidents can be eliminated but every effort should be made to ensure that any accident stops at "minor" and cant set off major disasters like the explosion at plantOSHA is the responsible party for the inspection of the plant in Texas.
OSHA is not a state run agency, its FEDERAL AGENCY.
Egg on your face.
Don't forget that the EPA also has some oversight.
Accidents happen, while it may be easy to say that all accidents can be prevented, in all actuality they cannot.
Is it fun to point fingers at people who are not responsible? Or is that just a tactic used to mitigate your own feelings of jealousy towards a state doing much better than your own?
You've gone an done it now. You just had to give them ammo, didn't you?OSHA is the responsible party for the inspection of the plant in Texas.
OSHA is not a state run agency, its FEDERAL AGENCY.
They didn't change any of the regulations concerning the plant, soooooo.......no one is saying accidents can be eliminated but every effort should be made to ensure that any accident stops at "minor" and cant set off major disasters like the explosion at plant
where did i say osha or epa weren't federal?
you seem intent on ignoring perry position (or just as much yours) that less regulations is better or that perry is promoting buisnesses to move to texas just for those.
OSHA gets involved when their is either a complaint or an accident.You've gone an done it now. You just had to give them ammo, didn't you?
Now, we'll have to listen to some administration crony tell us that the plant explosion was a result of "THE SEQUESTRATION". Dun-Dun-Duuuuh (que scary music)
Add it to the list. Pointless cancellation of White House tours, intentional and needless delaying of flights, Obama's mother in law getting kicked to the curb and his chef getting the boot isn't getting it done, damnit. We need to let these fuckers know you don't make cuts to our budget.
They didn't change any of the regulations concerning the plant, soooooo.......
Texas is doing better than most states, that fact cannot be denied. Mostly small businesses, as more regulation kills small business but helps big business get rid of competition.
Perry's position is rock solid from my viewpoint. Nothing he did or didn't do has anything to do with the plant exploding. The plant did not explode because small business is booming, it exploded because Federal Regulators cannot do their jobs correctly. Nothing new there, federal regulators have never been able to do jack shit, thats why accidents happen and cannot be avoided, thats why the financial collapse happened, why wars happen, etc etc etc. Government is nothing more than a giant FAILURE at anything it puts its finger on.
Hey look everyone, someone who doesn't know anything about what OSHA does.OSHA gets involved when their is either a complaint or an accident.
Guess what fuckwad? OSHA is now involved.
NO NO and NO. Try straw-manning someone who is an idiot, like Chezzus or something.so its federal regulators fault, not the plant owner therefore government = bad and libertarianism = good?
so it your veiw that without regulations you wouldnt have a hundred foot wide hole decorating waco texas?
Wow, you couldn't be any more wrong. OSHA used to come in annually and inspect the photo lab and storage area in the camera shop I managed back in the day. Fire Marshals inspected us regularly as well, but the OSHA visits were always unannounced. Not sure why you directed your abject stupidity at my post, I was just commenting on ND outing them as Feds. But, I'm always happy to point out you know nothing about that which you speak.OSHA gets involved when their is either a complaint or an accident.
Guess what fuckwad? OSHA is now involved.
where have i blamed perry for the explosion? what was that you were saying about strawmen?NO NO and NO. Try straw-manning someone who is an idiot, like Chezzus or something.
You seem to be trying to blame the governor for the explosion, because of a few deregulations that have NOTHING to do with the fertilizer plant.
We call it misplaced anger.
That's all.
The Plant owner? Was he in the plant the day it blew up? Was he the person who put things in the wrong places?
Perhaps it was some stupid employee who did something stupid?
Guess the stupid police should be blamed.
Pointing fingers does make one feel better doesn't it?
where have i blamed perry for the explosion? what was that you were saying about strawmen?
This along with the comic infers it.yeah im more than happy that our safety regulations raises our standards above 3rd world countries like Bangladesh or texas
ahh the hedged strawman.......This along with the comic infers it.
Seems like and being are different things. I never said you were, only seems like .
Bet you dollars to donuts a ex employee reported an unsafe work condition and that is why your employer got the visits.Wow, you couldn't be any more wrong. OSHA used to come in annually and inspect the photo lab and storage area in the camera shop I managed back in the day. Fire Marshals inspected us regularly as well, but the OSHA visits were always unannounced. Not sure why you directed your abject stupidity at my post, I was just commenting on ND outing them as Feds. But, I'm always happy to point out you know nothing about that which you speak.