Enormous new factory blast rocks Chinese industrial region

mabar

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
Another huge blast at a industrial zone in China...
http://www.rt.com/news/313933-china-factory-blast-new/ said:
Enormous new factory blast rocks Chinese industrial region

Another huge blast at a chemical facility has reportedly occurred in the Chinese province of Shandong. The explosion, located in an industrial zone in Lijin, Dongying City, happened late on Monday, China's People's Daily reported.

The blast was so massive it could be seen and heard from a great distance. A chemical factory is believed to have been in the area. According to People's Daily, the blast happened at around 11:30pm local time (3:30pm GMT).


edit:change a word

add:
_http://www.ibtimes.co.in/breaking-china-massive-explosion-chemical-industry-zone-lijin-casualties-feared-photos-644906 said:
China: Another Massive Explosion with 'Fireball' Rocks Chemical Industrial Zone in Lijin [Photos+Video

Another massive explosion rocked China on Monday night. Local reports claim that eyewitness saw and heard a loud explosion at the industrial zone of Lijin, Dongying City of Shandong.

People's Daily China said on its official Twitter account that the explosion took place at around 11.25pm in the industrial zone of Lijin. There are no reports yet of any causalities or injuries.


The impact of the blast reportedly was felt in the 2km radius of the industrial zone.

Images shared by eyewitnesses show the blast lighting up the night sky, followed by mushroom-like thick black smokes filling up the air.

Videos of the incident shared on Weibo shows a massive fireball, followed by the huge explosion that knocked off the camera.

Chinese social media users claimed that the blast took place at the chemical plant owned by Shandong Binyuan Chemical Co. Ltd, located in Lijin Binhai Economic and Technological Development Zone, 310 km from Tianjin port.

The Chinese industrial park - Lijin Economic Development Zone - houses several leading industries including petrochemicals, fine chemicals, bio-pharmaceutical, textile, machinery and electronics, thermal power, deep processing of agricultural and sideline products.

The accident comes weeks after the deadly Tianjin blast which left nearly 150 dead and 800 injured. The blasts at a chemical warehouse in the Tianjin port city earlier this month is one of deadliest industrial accidents in China.
 
Yes, there's been another chemical plant explosion in China, but that video is from Tianjin.
 
Niall said:
Yes, there's been another chemical plant explosion in China, but that video is from Tianjin.

You are right, Niall, also hey put everywhere this video for this new explosion. I have tried to find something different but impossible. In every news we see this video. Very strange.
 
___http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-08-31/china-rocked-another-massive-chemical-explosion-peoples-daily-reports___
Can someone else verify?
 
This one is already on SOTT since late last night from a different source, but other outlets which mention it seem scarce:

http://www.sott.net/article/300930-Another-massive-blast-rocks-chemical-factory-in-China
 
loreta said:
Niall said:
Yes, there's been another chemical plant explosion in China, but that video is from Tianjin.

You are right, Niall, also hey put everywhere this video for this new explosion. I have tried to find something different but impossible. In every news we see this video. Very strange.

I was looking yesterday for more or other images, and ... nop, using google translate and jumping between weibo and other sites, came to this site: _https://grasswire.com/story/1/DONGYING-EXPLOSION it has a couple of -after explosion images, one from today? with yellow gas coming from and a couple of hospital images, and, pretty much that's it

treesparrow said:
Correction no its not! Should have double checked :-[ . This again is footage from the first incident.
That is the strange reaching frustrating part, I suppose, not even in xinhuanet could find any relevant.

Regarding the video, what first incident? ... both incidents were at night, and this looks like to be earlier morning or twilight, at Reuters China, yesterday was a photo but today there is not.

edit: quote
 
mabar said:
Regarding the video, what first incident? ... both incidents were at night, and this looks like to be earlier morning or twilight, at Reuters China, yesterday was a photo but today there is not.

edit: quote

The Tianjin incident and I'm assuming that the explosion was another subsequent one on the following morning/day. There were certainly a lot of sightseers in the video at the time.
 
treesparrow said:
mabar said:
Regarding the video, what first incident? ... both incidents were at night, and this looks like to be earlier morning or twilight, at Reuters China, yesterday was a photo but today there is not.

edit: quote

The Tianjin incident and I'm assuming that the explosion was another subsequent one on the following morning/day. There were certainly a lot of sightseers in the video at the time.

Yeah that video you posted looks like Tianjin from a few weeks ago. I don't speak Chinese, but I remember that guy saying whatever he said before the explosion.
 
3D Student said:
treesparrow said:
mabar said:
Regarding the video, what first incident? ... both incidents were at night, and this looks like to be earlier morning or twilight, at Reuters China, yesterday was a photo but today there is not.

edit: quote

The Tianjin incident and I'm assuming that the explosion was another subsequent one on the following morning/day. There were certainly a lot of sightseers in the video at the time.

Yeah that video you posted looks like Tianjin from a few weeks ago. I don't speak Chinese, but I remember that guy saying whatever he said before the explosion.

Ah!, yes ..yes, I become fixated from the explosion at night, I remembered there were other explosions at the next/s days. Also had read about other accidents/explosions within the year besides Tianjin.
Thanks.
 
It's getting confusing because there have been several massive explosions at chemical storage facilities in China of late. There were at least three events in August.

The biggest event we know was what happened at Tianjin port on August 12th.

Then a much smaller explosion happened at a chemical warehouse in Huantai County, Shandong Province, on August 22nd: https://www.rt.com/news/313116-china-chemical-plant-explosion/

Then there's the most recent explosion at some kind of chemical storage facility in Dongying City, also in Shandong Province, on August 31st: http://www.cnbc.com/2015/08/31/major-explosion-reported-in-dongying-china.html

I still don't know which of those events that daytime video is taken from... maybe it's a different event altogether?
 
At Radio Canada this morning they talked about this new explosion but... with the same damned explosion, no more, just these 3 or 4 seconds that cut drastically. Showed where the explosion was, on a big map. So surely a new explosion or a lie? And why no footage at all? Or a false footage?
 
loreta said:
At Radio Canada this morning they talked about this new explosion but... with the same damned explosion, no more, just these 3 or 4 seconds that cut drastically. Showed where the explosion was, on a big map. So surely a new explosion or a lie? And why no footage at all? Or a false footage?

I wasn't able to find any footage of the event, either. I'm thinking, the black-out might have something to do with this Thursday's (Sept. 3) WWII Parade?

Beijing to restrict air space during Sept. 3 WWII military parade
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/08/01/us-china-military-idUSKCN0Q638M20150801

China will impose temporary air traffic controls on Beijing when it holds a military parade on Sept. 3 to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of World War Two, the official Xinhua news agency reported on Saturday, citing the aviation regulator.

The city's main airport, Beijing Capital International Airport, and the smaller Nanyuan Airport will be shut between 0930-1230 Beijing that day, according to the Air Traffic Management Bureau of the Civil Aviation Administration of China.

Many airlines have already canceled both outbound and inbound flights during that time frame, the authority said.

Aerial activity involving lightweight helicopters, gliders, hot air balloons and aerostats will also be banned from Aug. 22 to Sept. 4.

The military parade is due to top off a series of events that China has planned for the anniversary, which Chinese state media call the "victory of the Chinese People's War Against Japanese Aggression".


China Reveals Guest List for Big Military Parade
http://www.wsj.com/articles/china-reveals-guest-list-for-big-military-parade-1440480312

China released the guest list for its World War II Victory Day parade, providing a snapshot of its growing clout in many parts of the world while showing the strains the event is placing on relations with the U.S. and its allies.

The military parade through Beijing’s Tiananmen Square on Sept. 3 marks the first time China is commemorating the allied victory with such a high-profile event. Top leaders from 30 countries, including Russia, Venezuela and Sudan, will attend, and 17 countries will contribute troops to the spectacle, senior Chinese officials told a news conference Tuesday.

Absent from the guest list are leaders or troops from the U.S. or other major Western powers that fought alongside China in World War II. It also doesn’t include Kim Jong Un, the leader of North Korea, China’s only military ally.

Current leaders attending the parade include Russian President Vladimir Putin, Sudan’s President Omar Hassan al-Bashir and Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, Mr. Zhang said.

Several Western countries, including the U.K., France and Australia, will send government ministers, while the U.S. is among nations that will be represented by their diplomatic envoys in China, Mr. Zhang said.

Nearly 1,000 foreign troops will take part in the parade in all, said Maj. Gen. Qu.

Belarus, Cuba, Egypt, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mexico, Mongolia, Pakistan, Serbia, Tajikistan and Russia were sending the largest contingents of about 75 troops each, he said. Another six countries—Cambodia, Fiji, Laos, Vanuatu and Venezuela—were contributing smaller teams of around seven people each, he said.
 
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