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38 Years Ago Shell Norco Explosion
Posted on 5/5/26 at 8:17 am
Posted on 5/5/26 at 8:17 am
At 3:37 a.m. on May 5, 1988, an explosion occurred in the catalytic cracking unit (CCU) of an oil and gas refinery. The explosion apparently was the result of corrosion of an 8-inch (200 mm) vapor line. This vapor line, under 270 pounds per square inch (1,900 kPa) pressure, ran from a 10-inch (250 mm) header that originated as the main overhead vapor line from the depropanizer column. The apparent instantaneous line failure released approximately 17,000 pounds (7,700 kg) of hydrocarbon vapor for approximately 30 seconds. A possible ignition source could have been the unit's superheater furnace. The damage pattern indicated that the explosion was probably an aerial explosion with an epicenter located in the area between the depropanizer and the CCU control room. Employees #1, #2, #4, #5, and #7 were found fatally injured inside the CCU control room as a direct result of the blast. Employee #3 was found fatally injured approximately 30 feet (9.1 m) outside the west side of the CCU control room as a direct result of the blast. Employee #6 was fatally injured while he was exiting the GO-1 South control room.[4] Damage from the explosion radiated one mile (1.6 km) from the center of the explosion and debris could be found as far as five miles (8.0 km) from the center of the explosion. The blast could be heard approximately 25 miles (40 km) away in New Orleans. There were reports that the blast set off burglar alarms in New Orleans. The explosion caused a fire to burn for eight hours at the oil refinery before it was brought under control. Chemicals that escaped during the explosion resulted in cars and homes being covered by a black film. The governor declared a state of emergency in Norco and St. Charles Parish. Seven Shell workers were killed during the explosion and 48 residents and Shell workers were injured in the explosion. The explosion released 159 million pounds (72 kt) of toxic chemicals into the air, which led to widespread damage and the evacuating of 4,500 people.[3]
Posted on 5/5/26 at 8:18 am to MorbidTheClown
Shook the windows in our house in Chalmette.
didn't find out until later that day.
"Employee #2" was my first cousin.
didn't find out until later that day.
"Employee #2" was my first cousin.
Posted on 5/5/26 at 8:23 am to MorbidTheClown
Hard to believe it has been that long ago….
Posted on 5/5/26 at 8:30 am to Spankum
Yeah my cousin was a few years older and had offered to get me a job there a few times.
Literal could have been me.
Literal could have been me.
Posted on 5/5/26 at 8:31 am to MorbidTheClown
Heard it up in Hammond.
Posted on 5/5/26 at 8:43 am to MorbidTheClown
Lit up the night sky as if it were high noon.
May these men all RIP. Personally knew a couple of the families of these men and family/friends of those who survived. Sat next to one at a recent event. How that day impacted many lives...
I worked between college semesters at Norco as contractor following the explosion. If ever you want to appreciate the danger/risk of oil & gas, that was a master class on it.
May these men all RIP. Personally knew a couple of the families of these men and family/friends of those who survived. Sat next to one at a recent event. How that day impacted many lives...
I worked between college semesters at Norco as contractor following the explosion. If ever you want to appreciate the danger/risk of oil & gas, that was a master class on it.
This post was edited on 5/5/26 at 8:45 am
Posted on 5/5/26 at 8:47 am to MorbidTheClown
I had moved away from home, but my little sister lived with my parents about 20 miles from the plant and they all got nice checks of about $10k usd each.. which was a decent chunk of change when they got it in the late 1980s… prob about like $40k or $50k today, without looking it up…. Seems like everyone nearer to the plant in the River Parishes were driving around in shiny new pickups and had major home renos around that time after those checks hit too .
Posted on 5/5/26 at 9:01 am to Everyday Is Saturday
quote:
I worked between college semesters at Norco as contractor following the explosion
yeah, I worked for a computer company that did work at Norco back then. I remember going into this building with a kind of domed roof, Inside you could see these huge iron beams that had been shifted a few feet from their original position.
Was a really surreal feeling.
Posted on 5/5/26 at 9:06 am to MorbidTheClown
Shell made a Facebook post honoring the victims.


Posted on 5/5/26 at 9:08 am to MorbidTheClown
quote:
Was a really surreal feeling.
One of times I worked winter break 1989. F'n cold winter!
I am in a control room getting a permit when bulldozer rolled up outside to scrape ice off of the ground. The rumbling of the dozer freaked out some of the operators (some who had been on site May 1988 during explosion / PTSD like moment).
When the operators freaked out, my teen age naive self freaked out.
That explosion changed the world for too many.
This post was edited on 5/5/26 at 9:09 am
Posted on 5/5/26 at 9:11 am to MorbidTheClown
Made the careers of a number of plaintiffs' attorneys.
Posted on 5/5/26 at 9:27 am to MorbidTheClown
Relatives in Lutcher felt it! 
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