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Deadly Chemical Plant Explosion in Geismar

Ryan Meador
/
AP

UPDATED 9:22 p.m. CST:

The injured count is up to 77  and a 29-year-old man is dead after a chemical explosion in Geismar, La. Thursday. 

300 people were evacuated from the Williams Olefins plant, which produces over a billion pounds of propylene and ethylene a year for use in the production of other chemical and plastic products. It was propylene that caught fire after the explosion. Ten workers stayed behind to monitor a burn-off.

A few hours after the fire started, Gov. Bobby Jindal stood in the middle of a rural road lined with sugar cane fields and horse pasture as black smoke billowed out of the damaged  plant behind him.

"Everyone is concerned with securing lives, not just at the site, but in the surrounding areas as well," Jindal said.

The Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality said the air is safe to breathe, despite the sour smell.

The cause of the blast is unknown, but the governor promised an investigation.

The fire started Thursday morning at , about 20 miles southeast of Baton Rouge, according to Louisiana State Police Capt. Doug Cain. The company reported that the explosion occurred at 8:37 a.m. CST and that the flow of chemicals to the fire had been cut off by 10 a.m.

AP

Daniel Cuthbertson, a fuel truck operator, said he witnessed workers scrambling over gates and running from the plant when they heard the explosion, which shook the ground and was followed by a "ball of fire," according to the Associated Press.

In a statement on its website, the company said it is "focused on the safety and well-being" of its employees:

"Our emergency-response crews are thoroughly trained to respond to these types of incidents and are diligently performing their work with their first priority being the safety and well-being of people in and around the area.

"First responders are on the scene and local routes to the plant have been closed by the local authorities.

"We are in the process of accounting for all personnel. Injuries have been reported, the number and extent of those injuries is not known at this point."

Copyright 2021 WRKF. To see more, visit .

Kelly grew up in Baton Rouge. She started out in radio at Baton Rouge High where she was first on air at WBRH and KBRH. While studying film and politics at Hendrix College, she reported and hosted for KUAR in Little Rock, AR. She then moved on to KUT in Austin, TX. She misses the dry air, live music at Studio 1A and breakfast tacos, but is happy for crawfish and non-ironic use of Mardi Gras beads.
Amy Jeffries
Amy started her career in public radio at WNPR in Hartford, CT more than a decade ago. NPR flew her in to Baton Rouge to help WRKF cover the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina while she was still based in the North. Here she found her journalistic calling.
Scott Neuman is a reporter and editor, working mainly on breaking news for NPR's digital and radio platforms.

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