Multiple fatalities and injuries confirmed in explosion at Washington chemical plant

Longview, Washington - A number of people have died, and several have been badly injured after a chemical leak at a plant in Washington, officials said Tuesday.

Several people were killed in an explosion at a chemical leak in Longview on Tuesday (stock image).   © Unsplash/@edwinhooper

A tank containing a substance known as white liquor burst at the Nippon Dynawave Packaging Company in Longview, an hour north of Portland on the Washington-Oregon border, a statement said.

"Preliminary information indicates the rupture resulted in multiple critical injuries," said the statement, issued jointly by the company and Longview Fire Department.

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Robert F. Kennedy Jr. RFK Jr. freaks out wife Cheryl Hines while getting bit by snakes: "You're nuts!"

"Officials can also confirm fatalities related to the incident."

The statement gave no numbers on the people killed or injured, but said there was no threat to the public.

The Seattle Times, citing firefighting officials, said 10 people had been hurt: nine company employees and one firefighter.

The injuries range from minor to critical, the paper reported.

White liquor is a highly alkaline solution containing sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfide. It is used to break down wood chips in the early stages of paper manufacturing to create the pulp from which paper is made.

Nippon Dynawave Packaging, which is a subsidiary of Japan's Nippon Paper Group, says on its website that it produces eight billion single-serve containers every year, supplying customers in North America, Asia, and around the world.

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California chemical leak sparks evacuation orders

The incident in Washington comes as around 16,000 remain evacuated from their homes in Orange County, California, after a tank of volatile chemicals began overheating.

Firefighters dealing with that episode have worked since Friday to cool the 7,000 gallons of methyl methacrylate, which had been threatening to explode, sending a plume of toxic fumes over a heavily populated area just a few miles from Disneyland.

On Sunday, they announced that the threat of a large explosion had been eliminated, but that they were still working to tame the tank, which is owned by the Britain-based GKN Aerospace.