Ohio Chemical Spill Draws Focus on Railroad Dangers

The derailment might have been avoided if the railway company’s alarm system had given engineers an earlier warning that bearings were overheating, the chair of the National Transportation Safety Board said on Thursday with the release of a preliminary investigation.

The US has one of the most extensive rail networks in the world. But it is almost exclusively used for freight, and is owned and maintained by a handful of private transport giants, which together spend hundreds of millions of dollars on lobbying.

Rail workers and unions have bemoaned mass layoffs and a declining culture of safety. Much of this has been blamed on the widespread adoption of so-called Precision Scheduled Railroading (PSR), which improves efficiency, but according to its detractors, is just a blunt cost-cutting measure that sacrifices safety for profits. Since 2017, railroads have slashed their workforce by 30%.

Five of the workers caught up in Norfolk Southern’s mass layoffs were in the East Palestine area and were responsible for the maintenance of equipment detectors that may have identified the fault with this train, Christopher Hand from the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen told the Washington Post.

A 2019 investigation by Vice News found that overworked rail workers were given barely enough time to walk the length of the train when inspecting carriages, trains were getting longer and more haphazardly assembled, inspection points were closed, and a culture of fear was instilled in the much-diminished workforce.

At the time, workers warned that lax safety standards would eventually lead to a catastrophic derailment, and the intervention of regulators.

Despite the risks, research shows that rail is still one of the safest ways to transport hazardous goods. It is also one of the least climate-damaging ways to transport freight. According to the AAR, railroads carry 40% of US freight, but account for just 2% of transportation-related greenhouse gas emissions in the country.

The main alternative to transporting hazardous materials is via trucks on roads. And these are far more dangerous.

Trucks carrying hazardous materials cause many more incidents and deaths and inflict more damage than trains, according to federal data. And some observers say that increasing the cost of rail transport through increased regulation could push more hazardous cargo onto trucks, and into the environment.

Activists Decry ‘Bomb Trains’
But environmentalists are questioning whether such dangerous chemicals should be transported at all, and say the petrochemical industry is responsible for much of the dangerous cargo.

Amanda Kiger, director of local activist group River Valley Organizing, told Between The Lines radio show, that the area of the accident had an unusually high number of these trains, as they supply the local petrochemical hub that was built for the shale gas boom.

We have to transition to clean energy. There isn’t another choice at this point,” she said.

These calls were echoed by Chris Wilke, global advocacy manager with Waterkeeper Alliance, a global organization that supports local Waterkeeper groups around the world, including Hulton Vantassel’s.

Many of the dangerous chemicals being carried by the East Palestine train are used in plastic manufacturing, proof to Wilke that incidents like these will continue in line with demand for petrochemicals.

Some company is going to take these chemicals, and they’re going to use them to make plastics or paint or other products. To what degree is society comfortable with that being an imperative?”

Alistair Walsh is a journalist for Deutsche Welle. This article was edited by Sarah Steffen, and it is published courtesy of Deutsche Welle (DW).