There
have been numerous accidental spills involving acid at sea and in
ports, due to collision, grounding or equipment failure. The consequences
have in certain cases been dramatic for the crew. They have always
been highly localised, temporary and of minor impact for the environment.
Phosphoric
acid spills
in the aquatic environment include:
- The presence of barrels of phosphoric acid in the diverse chemical
cargo of the Cason, which grounded on 5 December
1987 on the Spanish Cap Finisterre and went on fire (see the Cason
archive)
-
A 336 tonne leak of a solution of fertilisers made up of 75 % phosphoric
acid into a river, from a fertiliser factory in
Gibson, Florida, USA on the 4 May 1988
-
The derailing of a train near Bethel (North Carolina,
USA) carrying chemicals, including phosphoric acid, with a partial
spill in a tributary to the river Tar on 1st February 2000.
-
The spill into a sewage network feeding into the river Peace of
15,000 m³ of industrial water containing phosphoric acid, by
a fertiliser manufacturer in Lakeland, Florida
on 29 September 2004 due to a hurricane.
The impact studies that were carried out did not reveal any significant
environmental effects from these accidents directly linked to the
phosphoric acid apart from at the actually spill point.
Several sulphuric acid spills have been known to
occur, in particular:
- A
maneuvering error leading to acid been pumped over board for 11
days, in the Trevo terminal, Brazil in August 1998 (see theBahamas
archive)
- 100 tonnes of concentrated sulphuric acid being found in the compartments
of the double hull of the Panam Perla on 10 November 1998 (see the
Panam Perla archive)
-
The low profile shipwreck of the chemical tanker the Balu off
the coast of the Bay of Biscay on 20 March 2001 with 8,000 tonnes
of sulphuric acid onboard (see the Balu
archive)
-
The shipwreck of the chemical tanker Ena 2 in the port of Hamburg
on 28 June 2004, due to a maneuvering error, with 6 tonnes of sulphuric
acid in a dock (see the Ena
2 archive)
- The
rupture of part of a 11,000 tonne tank at Kemira
chemical plant in Sweden, on 4 February
2005, led to a toxic cloud being produced and an exothermic reaction
with the water. For 3 hours 110,000 inhabitants were not allowed
to go outdoors while the toxic cloud dispersed.
As for
chlorhydric acid:
- In
the Netherlands in 1979, the Sinbad lost 51 one-tonne
cylinders of chlorine, which when it reacts with water produces
chlorhydric acid. A number of cylinders were quickly located and
recovered. Five years later, 27 cylinders had been recovered and
destroyed on the spot because of corrosion. 13 of the cylinders
were never found.
- On 28 April 1998, the chemical tanker Martina,
loaded with 600 tonnes of chlorhydric acid, collided with a container
ship in Swedish waters. The ship broke in two and sank. Five members
of the crew went missing. The cargo was unloaded.
See also

Wreck of the Cason
In
terms of nitric acid:
- On
7 May 2000, off the coast of Alexandria in Egypt, the Dalhia-S
was wrecked with 165 tonnes of nitiric acid onboard. Intervention
on the wreck was envisaged but never carried out.
- The
canal boat the Stolt Rotterdam went on fire and
sank on the Rhine in Germany on 15 November 2001, with 300 tonnes
of nitric acid. The acid was pumped out of the tanks which remained
intact, an operation which lasted a week.
The main problem encountered in these accidents was the risk involved
for the crew and, in port areas, for the inhabitants, in particular
in the case of the production of toxic fumes and exothermic reactions
when the acid came into contact with a metal. For this reason, the
loss of human life was the tragic consequence of the Cason and the
Martina disasters.
Information about the environmental impact of acid spills is very
limited, either due to a lack of investigation (e.g. for the Balu),
or because the studies were of little use, often being more qualitative
than quantitative (e.g. fertiliser factory in Gibson).
Last update: April
2006