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River fears as alcohol spills in tanker crash



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Published Date: 11 October 2008
FIREFIGHTERS battled for hours to stop thousands of litres of alcohol from spilling into the River Almond.
A tanker containing 30,000 litres of 94 per cent proof alcohol was involved in a collision with a car on the A71 at Muirhall Bonds near Addiewell yesterday morning.

The 52-year-old car driver was seriously injured and taken by ambulance to Edinburgh Royal Infirmary. The tanker driver suffered minor injuries, and was also taken to ERI as a precautionary measure.

The tanker overturned and hit a fence, spilling more than 6000 litres of alcohol on to the road.

Firefighters wearing breathing apparatus used a mixture of foam and dry sand to contain and absorb the highly-flammable liquid, which was at risk of exploding, and to prevent contamination of surrounding wildlife.

Tom Kane, Lothian and Borders Fire and Rescue group manager, said: "At 8.41am we were called to a collision involving a tanker and a car outside North British Distillery. We extricated one male casualty from the car using hydraulic cutting gear and he was taken by ambulance to the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary.

"The tanker had ruptured. It was full of 94 per cent proof alcohol and some of it was spilling."

Seven fire appliances, from Bathgate, Livingston, Marionville, Liberton and Newcraighall, and an investigation unit from Newbridge, attended the scene initially, and were replaced by two relief crews at 5pm.

A chemical team was set up, involving fire service hazard officers, officers from the Scottish Environment Protection Agency and a regional analyst, to assess the risk of contamination of the River Almond from the 6000 litres of spilled alcohol.

Cordons were set up around the accident scene and fire crews worked throughout the day to make the scene safe before accident investigations could be carried out. A recovery vehicle arrived at 7pm to move what was left of the tanker's contents.

A Sepa spokeswoman said: "Officers from the Scottish Environment Protection Agency were contacted by Lothian and Borders Police this morning and asked to attend the site of a tanker crash at the North British Warehouse Distillery, West Calder.

"Concerns surrounded leaking spirits and fuel, as well as the foam used to contain the spill.

"Our officers have inspected the local watercourses and are satisfied that there has been no serious pollution.

"Details of foam used and spirit loss will be obtained early next week and Sepa officers will visit the site again to recheck watercourses."

The A71 was closed both ways near the scene, with traffic diverted at West Calder via the A704, and the A706 Breich Cross traffic lights.

The road remained closed well into the evening.

A police spokeswoman said: "We are asking anyone who was in the area at the time, and who may have seen exactly what happened in the moments leading up to the collision, to contact us."

Anyone with information can contact police on 0131-331 3131.


The full article contains 494 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 11 October 2008 10:45 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Plodjfriss, Hammer of the Numpties,

Edinburgh 11/10/2008 12:23:16
If that lot had caught fire ...
2

Cynicaltalk,

11/10/2008 13:12:37
Should've released Kenny Richie from the pokey to drink the contents of the tanker.

It wouldn't be out of the ordinary for him, and would be a great civic duty.
3

Journalistic licence,

11/10/2008 13:42:06
Breaking news..........the centre of Edinburgh was bereft of jakeys today as they flocked to the scene of the accident.
4

mystic,

Edinburgh 11/10/2008 15:31:10
Free booze, wahey ... not that I drink anyway.

www.SeeingEdinburgh.co.uk
5

rs,

in ma house 11/10/2008 15:38:02
Pissed as a Newt
6

celtic4,

USA 11/10/2008 16:12:09
Thank God the load did not catch fire!
7

Arrow,

edinburgh 11/10/2008 16:25:48
would that be a Great Crested Newt?
8

Kirsty Boyd-Williamson,

New Town 11/10/2008 16:35:51
>1 : Plodjfriss ~ If that lot had caught fire ...

Indeed! It could have destroyed the stunningly beautiful hamlet of Addiewell.
9

Douglas,

Bathgate 11/10/2008 17:20:26
Would it be 94% percent pure alcohol, approx. 180 degrees proof?
10

Lloyd,

Nashville 11/10/2008 17:55:38
The foam is more of an environmental hazard than the alcohol is! Don't the emergency response teams know that the best way to handle an alcohol spill is DILUTE WITH WATER. Alcohol dilutes quickly, and evaporates readily -- the evaporation of high proof blends is what makes the spill inflammable. Reduce the proof of the blend, and the flammability index drops rapidly.

And there will be NO long-term contamination of the river. Alcohol will not hang around, like petroleum distillates do.
11

The Geniune Mario Antionette,

11/10/2008 20:05:32
you should have seen the head on this lot
12

Lord Dyson,

Our near reality 11/10/2008 21:04:46
"River fears as alcohol spills in tanker crash."

What is this p15h?"

A SEPA spokesperson has said, " "Our officers have inspected the local watercourses and are satisfied that there has been no serious pollution."

Further, every river in Lothians is in full spate (and has been for most of the year) so a tanker full of alcohol is going to make very little difference to anything. You really need to find something meaty to report on.





13

tumshie heid,

11/10/2008 23:29:18
Shouldn't have made much difference with all the half empty bottles of buckie the neds throw in anyway!
14

drunken proffet,

Tassy 12/10/2008 08:07:59
Well the River Almond has always been a bit polluted even after they cleaned it up. I remember one year watching the salmon jump the weir at Cramond. I do not suppose that has happened for a long time. See if they start doing it again, any chance you can pour the other 84000 litres into the river. Gradually of course, you would not wish the fish to be totally paralytic.
15

20th Century boy,

12/10/2008 10:16:27
Haud me back
16

No thanks...,

Cramond 13/10/2008 11:16:37
www.fishalmond.co.uk

Plenty of Salmon this year, sea trout and brown trout. The river is in pretty good condition and is getting better year on year.
17

HennyP,

13/10/2008 11:48:38
#9 It's about 53.6%abv. So just a little bit stronger than the bottled stuff (43% abv)... Still completely drinkable though...


 

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