Más Información

Sheinbaum reacciona a aspiraciones de Félix Salgado y Andrea Chávez para 2027; tienen que renunciar si quieren ser candidatos, reitera

Andrea Chávez pide licencia; "dejo el Senado para atender la tarea de acabar con 100 años de PRIAN en Chihuahua"

Buscaré la candidatura de Guerrero solo si Morena me lo pide: Félix Salgado; "voy si el partido me dice que le falta un lucero", dice

"No hay triunfos para siempre, Verde no debe confiarse": Monreal; reacciona a ruptura de coalición con Morena en SLP

PAN Puebla definirá candidaturas 2027 con encuestas y consulta; habrá apertura para perfiles ciudadanos

Ebrard reconoce que su hijo se hospedó 6 meses en la embajada de México en Reino Unido; niega uso indebido de recursos públicos
Two explosions
rocked a flood-crippled chemical plant near Houston early Thursday as a result of an outage adding a new hazard to Hurricane Harvey 's aftermath. While local authorities assured the smoke presented “ no danger to the community at all ,” the head of the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency ( FEMA ), described the plume of smoke as “ incredibly dangerous .”
Arkema Inc.
said in a statement on its website that the Harris County Emergency Operations Center reported two explosions and black smoke coming from the plant in Crosby , about 40 kilometers ( 25 miles ) northeast of Houston, at about 2 a.m.
At a news conference, Assistant Harris County Fire Chief , Bob Rayall , said that different grades of organic peroxides in a semi-trailer caught fire not long after midnight. The fire emitted 9 to 12 meter ( 30 to 40 foot ) flames and black smoke.
Rayall did not refer to any blasts, but Harris County Fire Marshal spokeswoman , Rachel Moreno , said there had been “two small explosions.”
Harris County Sheriff
, Ed Gonzalez , said that some deputies suffered irritated eyes from the smoke but insisted that the smoke was not dangerous. “It is not anything that we feel is a danger to the community at all,” he assured.
In contrast, FEMA administrator , Brock Long , told reporters at a news conference in Washington that “by all means, the plume is incredibly dangerous.”
On Wednesday, a plant spokeswoman said that the flooded facility had lost power and backup generators due to the flooding, leaving it without refrigeration for chemicals that become volatile as the temperature rises.
Gonzalez said the fire would burn itself out. Rayall said the fire service was not monitoring the fire—“ that is the industry’s responsibility ”—and that the company hired a contractor to do aerial monitoring of the smoke to see in which direction it was going.
An AP photographer at a roadblock about 3 kilometers ( 2 miles ) from the scene could see no sign of a blaze in the direction of the chemical plant as the sun rose Thursday morning.
sg
Noticias según tus intereses
[Publicidad]
[Publicidad]








