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Exploded Texas Fertilizer Plant Was Across The Street From The Local High School

Gus Lubin   

Exploded Texas Fertilizer Plant Was Across The Street From The Local High School
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west high school texas

AP Photo/WFAA-TV

This video image provided by WFAA-TV shows injured people being treated on the flood-lit the high school football field turned into a staging area after the blast in West Texas Wednesday April 17, 2013.

The West Fertilizer Co. plant that exploded on Wednesday night was in the middle of a a small Texas town.

West, Texas is a town with a population of 2,674 people. Of this small population, more than 100 were injured and 5 to 15 killed in the massive explosion.

As you can see from the map below, the fertilizer plant was right across the street from West High School. Thankfully, the explosion happened at 7:53 PM, when the school would not normally be in session.

An ammonia smell coming from the plant, which is owned by Adair Grain Inc., was investigated in 2006/2007. The plant agreed to limit tank levels "to ensure maintainable pressure levels" and reduce possible emissions. Texas officials concluded that emissions from the plant would not pose a danger, according to Dallas News. The plant still had as much as 54,000 pounds of anhydrous ammonia on hand, Dallas News reports.

Exposure to this toxic ammonia could be a dangerous factor in the explosion.


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