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Following recent events highlighting the potential devastating effects of accidents involving rail transportation of flammable liquids, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) of the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) released a pre-publication copy of a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) on July 23 designed to improve the safety of transporting such materials. The proposed regulations come more than a year after the derailment and explosion of a train carrying 72 tank cars, each filled with 30,000 gallons of Bakken crude oil in Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, that killed 47 people. PHMSA will accept comments 60 days from the date of publication (not yet available) in the Federal Register. Given the extensive comments received on the Advanced Notice of Proposed Rule Making (ANPRM), the agency has indicated it does not intend to extend the comment period.
Under the proposed regulations, all offerors and shippers would be required to implement a sampling and testing program for mined gases and liquids extracted from the earth (e.g., crude oil) to ensure their hazards are understood and accounted for in packaging and emergency preparedness. Offerors would be required to maintain documentation of the sampling and testing program, review their program annually, and make program documentation available to DOT upon request. The program would include:
The proposed regulations would impose additional requirements for high-hazard flammable trains (HHFTs), defined by the NPRM as trains carrying 20 or more tank carloads of a Class 3 flammable liquid. Specifically, all HHFT units constructed after October 1, 2015 must comply with DOT-117 tank car design requirements for tank cars, such as inclusion of thermal protection systems and tank car plate thickness requirements. The rule would phase out DOT-111 tank cars, the oldest tank cars in use, on the following schedule:
| HHFT Class 3 Flammable Liquid Packing Group | DOT-111 Not Authorized After |
| I | October 1, 2017 |
| II | October 1, 2018 |
| III | October 1, 2020 |
Along with changes to tank car design specifications, operators of HHFTs would have to implement the following requirements:
Along with the NPRM, DOT issued a companion ANPRM seeking comment on the application of oil spill response planning to the shipment of flammable liquids as well as an Operation Safe Delivery Update report containing data collected from its staff and the FRA from August 2013 to May 2014. This report concludes that Bakken crude oil is more volatile and flammable compared to other crude oils. In a press release, DOT claims that it will continue to monitor the data through the fall of 2014.
The post DOT Proposes Rules for Rail Transport of Flammable Materials: New Standards for Classification, Tank Cars, Emergency Preparedness appeared first on The National Law Forum.
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