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Fertilizer plant fire leads to mass evacuation in US after explosion concerns

About 6,500 people have been told to evacuate their homes in Winston-Salem, North Carolina due to a fire at a fertilizer plant storing over 300 tons of potentially explosive ammonium nitrate, city officials said on Tuesday.

The blaze at the Weaver Fertilizer Plant on North Cherry Street started Monday evening. Residents within one mile of the plant were urged to evacuate and stay away from their homes for up to 48 hours.

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“We abandoned the firefighting operation because there’s a large volume of ammonium nitrate on site,” Winston-Salem fire chief Trey Mayo said.

A large quantity of ammonium nitrate exposed to intense heat can trigger an explosion.

In 2020, a massive blast at a warehouse used to store ammonium nitrate in Beirut, Lebanon killed at least 100 people and injured nearly 4,000, while an explosion at a Texas fertilizer plant killed 14 and injured about 200 in 2013.

Mayo said the North Carolina facility had somewhere between 300 and 600 tons of the chemical. “To put that in perspective, in 2013… (the Texas) fire and explosion involved around 240 tons of ammonium nitrate.”

He said the building had collapsed and access to the product that is in the building was restricted.

“We could not flow enough volume of water into the area where that ammonium nitrate is stored to be reasonably certain that we could keep it cool enough to prevent a detonation.”

No injuries have been reported so far and the cause of fire was not known, local media reported.

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