Chemical accidents

Chemical accidents are unanticipated releases, explosions, fires and other harmful incidents involving toxic and hazardous materials. While chemical accidents may occur whenever toxic materials are stored, transported or used, the most severe accidents tend to involve major chemical manufacturing and storage facilities. Significant events include the Bhopal industrial disaster of 1984, which released a highly toxic gas at a Union Carbide pesticides facility and killed more than 2,000 people.

Efforts to prevent accidents range from improved safety systems to fundamental changes in chemical use and manufacture, referred to as primary prevention or inherent safety.

In the U.S., concern about chemical accidents after the Bhopal disaster led to the passage of the 1986 Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act. The EPCRA requires local emergency planning efforts throughout the country, including emergency notifications. The law also requires companies to make publicly available information about their storage of toxic chemicals. Based on such information, citizens can identify the vulnerable zones in which severe toxic releases could cause harm or death.

In 1990, the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazardous Investigation Board was established by Congress, though the CSB did not become operational until 1998.

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See also: Chemical accidents, Bhopal, Chemical, EPCRA, Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act, Explosion, Fire, Industrial disaster, Toxic, Union Carbide