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Massive blast hits UK fuel depot 12-11-2005 By
Stephen Hird and Michael HoldenSun Dec 11, 5:07 PM ET REUTERS Explosions
tore through a fuel depot north of London on Sunday, spewing out a huge tower of
smoke and flame in what officials said could be one of the biggest blasts of its
kind in peacetime Europe. Police
said only one person was seriously injured and believed it was almost certainly
an accident. "There
is nothing that indicates anything other than an accident," Hertfordshire
Chief Constable Frank Whiteley told a news conference after Britons, still on
edge from July bomb attacks in London, awoke to fresh images of destruction. Witnesses
described a series of massive explosions at the Buncefield oil depot just after
6 a.m. British time, shooting flames and billowing smoke hundreds of feet into
the air, blowing out the windows of nearby homes and causing widespread damage. A
Reuters witness said the blast was heard 25 miles away in northwest London. The
county's chief fire officer, Roy Wilsher, said it was the largest fire he had
seen and would burn for at least another 24 hours. "We
have been informed by experts that this is possibly the largest incident of this
kind in peacetime Europe," he said. Hours
later, the sky was still blackened by smoke which had drifted miles across
southern England and was big enough to be visible on space satellite images. Health
officials said the pall of smoke was unlikely to harm most people, but warned
those living around the depot to stay indoors and keep windows and doors shut. "If
there was going to be a large-scale reaction I would expect that we would have
started to see the signs of it by now," Jane Halpin, director of public
health for the region, told a news conference. BONE-JARRING
BLAST Police
said there were 43 casualties but only one person appeared to have suffered
serious injuries. "At the moment it looks as if we got off a lot more
lightly than you would expect with an explosion of this size," Whiteley
said. People
living in the Hemel Hempstead area were shaken by what they said was a
bone-jarring blast. Mike
Carlish, who lives 3 miles from the Buncefield depot, said he had been woken by
a "blinding white flash" and a blast so powerful it knocked plaster
off the ceiling in his house. Deputy
Prime Minister John Prescott visited the scene and praised the emergency
services' work. "He
was just glad that the number of people injured was small and that there were no
fatalities," a spokesman said. Officials
said the explosions were unlikely to cause fuel shortages and urged motorists to
avoid panic buying of petrol. But witnesses reported queues of drivers at petrol
stations. The
Buncefield depot supplies petrol and fuel oils to a large part of southeast
England, including Luton and Heathrow airports. Oil is brought to the depot,
near the town of Hemel Hempstead, by underground pipeline from tankers unloading
on the east coast. A
government spokesman said when full, the depot holds five percent of Britain's
oil supply, but they could not say how much it was holding before the blast. He
said oil industry chiefs were meeting to work out how to guarantee supplies from
other distribution terminals. "There
is nothing to suggest there will be a fuel shortage as a result of this,"
Whiteley said. The
depot, the fifth largest in Britain, is jointly run by oil companies Total and
Texaco. Police said about half the plant had been destroyed. Britain
has been on edge since four suicide bombers blew themselves up on underground
trains and a bus in London in July, killing 52 commuters. Britons
have also been concerned about petrol supplies since hauliers blockaded
refineries in a fuel tax protest five years ago and brought Britain to a virtual
halt.
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