Faulty track caused derailment, oil spill in Lake Wabamun: TSB### Safety board recommends replacing worn-out rail, improving track testing#### Last Updated: Thursday, October 25, 2007 | 12:55 PM MTCBC News
A defective rail caused a CN train to leave the tracks, dumping oil into a popular Alberta lake two years ago, according to the final report by the Transportation Safety Board.
The derailment, which led to an environmental charge against CN, spilled more than 700,000 litres of bunker oil and other chemicals into Lake Wabamun, 50 kilometres west of Edmonton, in August 2005.
More than 40 rail cars derailed just metres from homes bordering Lake Wabamun.
(John Ulan/Canadian Press)
A 12-metre section of replacement rail had at least 13 defects that went undetected before the derailment, said George Fowler, a track specialist and TSB investigator, at a news conference in Edmonton on Thursday.
Fractures in the faulty track, installed in 2003, grew until at least one broke, sending the train onto the shores of Lake Wabamun.
The safety board made three recommendations in its latest report:
- Set minimum standards for the quality, strength of rails.
- Review Canadian rail procedures, equipment used to test tracks.
- Establish standards that require that fatigued rails be replaced.
The report also said weak emergency response plans by both CN Rail and the provincial government contributed to the impact of the spill.
Residents of the village of Wabamun who feel CN did not respond quickly enough to the spill had called