Area fire and ambulance crews arrive near the scene in
Middletown, Connecticut where multiple people have died in
an explosion at a power plant. (AP Photo/Richard Messina,
Hartford Courant)
An explosion has blown apart a power plant under
construction in Connecticut as workers purged natural gas
lines, killing at least five people and injuring a dozen or
more in a blast that shook homes for miles, officials said.
Middletown Mayor Sebastian Giuliano said at a late-afternoon
news conference that at least 12 people were injured.
Deputy Fire Marshal Al Santostefano told The Associated Press
before a news conference that crews were still searching for
survivors in the rubble at the Kleen Energy Systems plant in
Middletown, about 30km south of Hartford.
Santostefano earlier said about 50 people were in the area
around 11:17am, when the explosion occurred. The mayor said
at the news conference it was difficult to tell how many
people were at the plant because multiple contractors were
working on it with their own employee lists.
"They're trying to figure out who was on the job today, and
where are they now?" Giuliano said.
The 620-megawatt plant was being built to produce energy
primarily using natural gas. Santostefano said workers for
the construction company, O&G Industries, were purging
the gas lines, a procedure he called a "blow-down," when the
explosion occurred.
Lynn Hawley, 54, of Hartland, Conn., told the AP that her
son, Brian Hawley, 36, is a pipefitter at the plant. He
called her from his cell phone to say he was being rushed to
Middlesex Hospital.
"He really couldn't say what happened to him," she said. "He
was in a lot of pain, and they got him into surgery as
quickly as possible."
She said he had a broken leg and was expected to survive.
Officials had not released the conditions of the other
injured people by late Sunday afternoon, but hospitals
reported some seriously injured patients.
The thundering blast shook houses for miles.
"I felt the house shake, I thought a tree fell on the house,"
said Middletown resident Steve Clark.
Barrett Robbins-Pianka, who lives about a mile away and has
monitored the project for years, said she was running outside
and heard what she called "a tremendous boom."
"I thought it might be some test or something, but it was
really loud, a definite explosion," she said.
Kleen Energy Systems LLC began construction on the power
plant in February 2008. It had signed a capacity deal with
Connecticut Light and Power for the electricity produced by
the plant. Construction was scheduled to be completed by
mid-2010.
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