An explosion rocked a major petrochemical facility of Mexican national oil company Pemex in the Gulf state of Veracruz on Wednesday, killing at least three people and injuring dozens more, senior officials said.
MEXICO CITY: An explosion rocked a major petrochemical
facility of Mexican national oil company Pemex in the Gulf state of
Veracruz on Wednesday, killing at least three people and injuring dozens
more, senior officials said.
Luis Felipe Puente, head of federal emergency services, told
Reuters that three people had died in the blast and as many as 45 were
injured. The governor of Veracruz state, Javier Duarte, told local
television that more than 60 people were injured.
Pemex said the explosion, which sent a huge, dark plume of
smoke billowing into the sky, occurred at the facility's chlorinate 3
plant near the port of Coatzacoalcos, one of the company's top oil
export hubs. The cause was unclear.
Local emergency officials said hundreds of people had been evacuated
from the site. Television footage showed an initial burst of flames
followed by a tower of thick smoke. A Pemex official said local oil
exports were not affected by the blast.The incident took place at Petroquimica Mexicana de Vinilo, or PMV, a vinyl petrochemical plant that is a joint venture between Pemex's petrochemical unit and Mexican plastic pipe maker Mexichem.
The plant, operated by Mexichem, is located within Pemex's larger Pajaritos petrochemical complex.
Mexichem said in a brief statement that the explosion occurred in an ethylene unit at the plant. The company could not be immediately reached for further comment.
In February, a worker was killed in a fire at the PMV plant, which produces vinyl chloride monomer, also known as chloroethene, an industrial chemical used to produce plastic piping.
The incident occurred just weeks after three workers were killed and at least seven injured when a fire broke out on a Pemex oil-processing platform in the Gulf of Mexico.
It also came as Pemex fights to stem a slide in output that has hammered the company, and to implement deep cost cuts to cope with a sharp drop in oil prices. Mexico is trying to lure private investors to revive its oil industry.
Pemex, which enjoyed a decades-long monopoly over Mexico's
oil and gas sector until an energy reform opened up the sector in 2014,
has experienced a series of high-profile accidents.
In 2013, at least 37 people were killed by a blast at
Pemex's Mexico City headquarters, and 26 people died in a fire at a
Pemex natural gas facility in northern Mexico in September 2012.
A 2015 fire at its Abkatun Permanente platform in the
oil-rich Bay of Campeche affected oil output and cost the company up to
US$780 million.
Pemex said last year it had reduced its annual accident rate
in 2014 by more than 33 percent. But a Reuters investigation found that
Pemex was reducing its accident rate by including hours worked by
office staff in its calculations.
(Reporting by David Alire Garcia, Gabriel Stargardter, Liz Diaz, Dave
Graham and Anna Yukhananov; Editing by Simon Gardner and Peter Cooney)
- Reuters
Three dead, dozens injured in blast at Pemex complex in Mexico
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