At a Nov. 9 public meeting in Washington, D.C., CSB officials
presented the findings and recommendations from its investigation into
explosions that occurred in Kinston, N.C.
(West Pharmaceutical Services); Corbin, Ky. (CTA Acoustics); and
Huntington, Ind. (Hayes-Lemmerz) in 2003. These three explosions killed
14 people and injured 81 others.
In its report, CSB notes that there is no comprehensive OSHA standard addressing dust explosions, which occur when fine particles of combustible material are ignited.
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CSB also points out that the required safety data sheets for combustible powders provide no warnings that they could explode.
Training, Expanded Dust Warnings Also Recommended
In addition to calling on OSHA to issue a new national standard designed to prevent combustible dust fires and explosions in general industry, CSB is asking OSHA to:
Among other CSB recommendations in the report, the agency is calling
on the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) to modify its
standard for hazardous industrial chemicals
to urge that material safety data sheets include combustible dust
warnings.
The CSB report on combustible dust hazards is available on the agency's Web site. The agency also said it plans to release to the public data on the 281 previous dust incidents that form part of the basis for the study.