Search

10 Hurt in Ice Cream Facility Hazmat Unloading Explosion

Posted on 7/24/2021 by Lauren Scott and Roseanne Bottone

Ten employees are recovering after sustaining injuries related to a liquid nitrogen explosion at a Kentucky ice cream facility last week, on July 21. The incident occurred as a truck was unloading the chemical into a storage tank at the facility. The cause of the explosion is currently under investigation.

Nine workers were released from local hospitals the day after the explosion, with one still undergoing medical care. The company is currently working with local, State, and Federal officials to provide a complete investigation on the blast.

Although the facility is owned by a nationwide ice cream chain, the site at which the incident occurred typically makes ingredients for a third-party company. The facility uses liquid nitrogen to flash freeze ice cream products. Production is expected to resume at the plant soon.

How Liquid Nitrogen Explodes

When liquid nitrogen vaporizes, it expands by a factor of nearly 700. That means 1 liter of liquid nitrogen will expand to fill nearly 25 cubic feet with nitrogen gas. This expansion can cause a sealed container to explode. The nitrogen gas also displaces oxygen and can cause suffocation.

Fourteen people died from asphyxiation in liquid nitrogen related incidents between 2012 and 2020. The Kentucky ice cream facility incident follows a tragic liquid nitrogen leak in an Atlanta-area food processing plant earlier this year that killed six employees.

Hazmat Transportation Includes Unloading

Incidents during loading and unloading are not uncommon. In 2016, a cloud of chlorine gas floated through a Kansas community after an incident that occurred during unloading of sulfuric acid at a local grain processing facility.

US DOT’s Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMR) require hazmat training for any employee who can directly affect the safe transportation of hazardous materials. The cycle of transportation begins with loading the hazmat, including its movement and storage incidental to movement, and ends after the hazmat has been unloaded at its destination.   

A person who unloads a truck of a Division 2.2 compressed gas like Nitrogen, refrigerated liquid (UN 1977) performs a regulated activity and must receive general awareness, security awareness, and function-specific training to do the job properly.  In addition, the unloader must receive hazmat safety training to be aware of the material’s hazards, know how to protect themselves, and to be prepared to handle accidents and emergencies (see 49 CFR 172.704(a)(1)—(5).

Prevent Transportation Incidents with Effective Hazmat Training

Training is not just a good management practice; it’s a legally mandated requirement.

Safety concerns are the primary reason for providing thorough and effective hazmat training. The failure to do so can result in hefty fines just for the training violation. Currently, the minimum civil penalty for a training violation is $508 per employee, per day of the deficiency.

Bring a Lion instructor to your site to present required hazmat training for your shipping team! Get answers to your site’s unique questions and focus on the materials, situations, and job responsibilities you deal with every day.

Request a quote for your group.  
 

Tags: hazardous materials, hazmat unloading, liquid nitrogen, UN 1977

Find a Post

Compliance Archives

Lion - Quotes

One of the best trainings I have ever received!

Brandon Morfin

EH&S Manager

You blew the doors off the competition!

Stephen Bieschke

Facilities Manager

Well designed and thorough program. Excellent summary of requirements with references. Inclusion of regulations in hard copy form, as well as full electronic with state pertinent regulations included is a great bonus!

Oscar Fisher

EHS Manager

The course was very well structured and covered the material in a clear, concise manner.

Ian Martinez

Hazmat Shipping Professional

I attended training from another provider and learned absolutely nothing. Lion is much better. Hands down.

Nicole Eby

Environmental Specialist

I like Lion's workshops the best because they really dig into the information you need to have when you leave the workshop.

Tom Bush, Jr.

EHS Manager

Lion's training was by far the best online RCRA training I've ever taken. It was challenging and the layout was great!

Paul Harbison

Hazardous Waste Professional

The instructor was great, explaining complex topics in terms that were easily understandable and answering questions clearly and thoroughly.

Brittany Holm

Lab Supervisor

Excellent class, super instructor, very easy to follow. No rushing through material. Would like to take his class again.

Lawrence Patterson

EH&S Facility Maintenance & Security Manager

Excellent. I learned more in two days with Lion than at a 5-day program I took with another provider.

Francisco Gallardo

HES Technician

Download Our Latest Whitepaper

A guide to developing standard operating procedures, or SOPs, that help you select, manage, and audit your hazmat agents and contractors.

Latest Whitepaper

By submitting your phone number, you agree to receive recurring marketing and training text messages. Consent to receive text messages is not required for any purchases. Text STOP at any time to cancel. Message and data rates may apply. View our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.