Lack of safety practices behind 2020 Chesapeake oil-well blast: U.S. safety board

Illustration shows Chesapeake Energy logo

(Reuters) -A federal safety board investigation has found that Chesapeake Energy and its contractors failed to provide adequate control measures at the site of a 2020 fire at a company-operated oil well, that claimed three lives.

The U.S. Chemical Safety Board (CSB), which investigates industrial chemical accidents, said in a report published earlier this week that the well operator and its contractors failed to implement required well control measures at the Wendland Well in Texas.

Operated by Oklahoma-based Chesapeake Energy, the Wendland Well caught fire in January 2020 and led to three fatalities, the first in Texas involving a blowout since April 2013.

“Ultimately, a lack of established safety practices was a significant factor in this incident,” said investigator-in-charge Harold Griffin at CSB.

“In this case, the well operator and its contractors did not implement effective preventative safety measures consistent with industry recommended practices.”

Chesapeake Energy declined to comment.

Ad: Save every day with Amazon Deals: Check out today's daily deals on Amazon.

The CSB investigates major industrial accidents and makes recommendations to prevent accidents. It has no regulatory power, but it is influential because industry, labor, and U.S. government agencies often adopt its recommendations.

(Reporting by Seher Dareen and Mrinalika Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim Zahid)

Related posts

What’s the weather forecast for New Jersey This Weekend?

Juvenile charged in Evesham vehicle burglary spree after multi-agency search

Fatal crash under investigation after two-car collision in West View