Previously Recorded Fire Radio Traffic

 

 
   
 

click on for larger image

 
  A line of trucks caught fire at a Chesapeake Energy Corporation drilling site in west Shreveport Friday, sending a dark plume of smoke skyward and calling response from multiple fire departments.

The fire caused no injuries, no spills or environmental damage and didn't threaten the Greenwood neighborhoods surrounding the site, authorities said. All employees were accounted for by the time the blaze was brought under control.

The fire started around 11:30 a.m. when a Cudd Energy Services truck caught fire while working on the Lee 21H-1 natural gas well site near the intersection of Greenwood Road and Rice Road, according to Chesapeake Energy Media Coordinator Katie McCullin. The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

The fire spread quickly to the adjacent trucks, and by the end of the day, 10 18-wheelers were engulfed and destroyed. The trucks were carrying hydraulic fracturing fluid, a mixture used in the final stages of the drilling process, according to Shreveport Fire Department Chief Safety Officer Scott Wolverton.

Wolverton said the fluid isn't combustible and didn't exacerbate the conflagration. He said it was the diesel fuel and the vehicle cabs themselves that were burning, the dark smoke coming from the big rigs' fuel supply.

Shreveport Fire and Caddo Fire District 1, 3 and 4 responded to the scene to battle the blaze.

The nearest hydrant was 3/4 of a mile away, Wolverton said, requiring fire fighters to set up a "water shuttle system." Caddo Fire District trucks shuttled water from the hydrant to a steel-framed pool, from which the hoses drew water, near the blaze.

Fire fighters also positioned two unmanned monitors — devices capable of deploying 1,200 gallons of water a minute without human assistance — against the fire, Wolverton said. Men on the ground also used large chemical fire extinguishers.

Wolverton said there was never any fear of fire exposure to sensitive drilling operations of natural gas storage. He said the industrial-grade fire was quickly contained to keep it from spreading.

"Any time you hear about something near a gas well, that sends some real sense of urgency," Wolverton said. "The amount of dark smoke can make us very concerned."

None of the nearby neighborhoods were evacuated, but several residents reported hearing loud booms around the time the fire started. There were no explosions reported, though, according to Chesapeake's Director of Corporate Development Paul Pratt.

Dorothy Durden, of the 6800 block of Greenway Avenue, said she heard three distinctive booms, which she said were likely the 18-wheelers' tires exploding. She said she didn't feel threatened by what she originally thought was a house fire, but said she'd never seen anything like it in her 50 years in the neighborhood.

LaTonya Washington, of the 6700 block of Greenway Avenue, said she heard similar booms but couldn't place what they were. She said she wasn't sure what was going on until she saw the plumes of smoke
 
    
  >> Return to Recorded Fire Dispatches Index <<