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Tuesday, 29 December 2015

Derailed Train in Australia Had More Than 200,000 Gallons of Acid on Board


The train that derailed in northern Australia over the weekend was carrying more than four times as much sulfuric acid as previously announced, police said Tuesday.

The freight train had roughly 819,000 liters (216,000 gallons) of the highly corrosive acid on board when it came off the tracks Sunday morning in a remote area of northern Queensland, state police said. They had initially said about 200,000 liters of acid was on board.


Officials believe that at least one of the freight cars has probably ruptured, which means as much as 31,500 liters of acid could have leaked out, according to a police statement.

Authorities have declared an emergency and set up a 2-kilometer (1.2-mile) exclusion zone around the crash site. The exclusion zone is expected to remain in place until at least Thursday.

The train's locomotive ended up on its side, and all 26 freight cars it was pulling derailed, according to authorities.Photos from the scene showed the jumble of cars sprawled across mangled tracks and waterlogged terrain.


Three men who were aboard the train were believed to have suffered minor injuries, police said.

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