Environmental safety officials say the area around the site of a
chemical plant explosion in northeast China is free of
pollutants.
Officials had conducted repeated tests on groundwater around the
Xiguang Chemical Plant since the blast on April 6, said a statement
from the government of Harbin, capital of Heilongjiang Province.
Tests showed the blast has caused no pollution in the Songhua
River or the surrounding area, said the statement on Saturday.
Tanks containing the raw materials for producing diluting agents
exploded around 3.30 PM, injuring two workers and destroying four
tons of dimethylbenzene and cinnamene at the plant in Songbei
District of Harbin.
The plant, a collectively-owned factory, which used to do paint
mixing, had an annual production capacity of 20 tons of diluting
agents.
Probes showed it was operating illegally after being ordered to
shut down in October last year. The blast occurred just three days
after it resumed unlicensed production on April 3.
The site is just four km from the Songhua River, a tributary of
the Heilongjiang -- or Amur River -- which flows along Sino-Russian
border. There are no homes within a kilometer of the plant.
A team of inspectors from Harbin environmental protection bureau
and the public security bureau have been probing the cause of the
accident.
Police have been trying to trace the plant's legal
representatives, who disappeared after the explosion. Environmental
protection officials have monitored air and water quality.
About 100 tons of benzene-based chemicals spilled into the
Songhua River after another chemical plant blast in neighboring
Jilin Province on Nov. 13 last year. It was one of the worst cases
of river pollution since the founding of new China in 1949.
(Xinhua News Agency April 17, 2006)