Three barges, including one transporting about 1,400 tons of methanol, were pinned against a dam on the Ohio River in Louisville, Kentucky, on Tuesday, officials said.
The three were part of a group of 10 barges that broke free from their tugboat about 2 a.m. Tuesday after it hit with a structure at the entrance to the Portland Canal, near the river’s McAlpine Locks and Dam, Louisville’s Emergency Management Agency said in a statement. All except for the one carrying methanol were transporting soy and corn.
“There is currently zero evidence of a tank breach or any leaks, and air and water monitoring resources are in place,” the emergency agency said.
The situation prompted officials to limit traffic on the river as state and federal agencies responded and attempted to remove the three barges, U.S. Coast Guard spokesperson Chris Davis said.
Downriver traffic has been stopped, and nearby locks that’d reopened after earlier closures would likely close again overnight as officials reassess the situation, he said.
“We had shut down traffic,” Davis said. “There’s going to be salvage operations and it’s going to be dangerous.”
he Louisville Water Company said the incident was downriver from its intake, and thus there has been no impact on the city’s drinking water. Your water is safe to drink,” it said on Facebook.
The seven other barges that broke loose were recovered earlier by other vessels in the area, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said. No injuries were reported and no one is missing, it said.
Methanol is used in windshield washer fluid, gas line antifreeze, carburetor cleaner, copy machine fluid, perfumes, and other products. Part of a group of “toxic alcohols,” the chemical can be “extremely dangerous” to humans if ingested and can result in death, coma and respiratory and circulatory failure, according to white paper on the chemical published by federal health officials.
The U.S. Coast Guard was investigating the cause of the crash that freed the barges.