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![]() "Wayne.B" wrote in message The people formulating the study must also be competent. Anyone postulating an LNG tanker exploding halfway into the Fort Point Channel in Boston didn't do much homework. Sorry, Wayne, I didn't make my point clearly. The study that Short Wave cited made reference to an LNG tanker in the Fort Point Channel. The Fort Point Channel is a small offshoot from Boston Harbor dating from colonial times. In present day it has no connection whatsoever to any kind of shipping, and anyone who would put such a reference in an impact study clearly did not take the time to learn much about Boston Harbor or its environs. I think history has proven that tankers can explode just about anywhere and it doesn't take a terrorist act. Given planning and malice, just about ANY tanker can be turned into an incredible weapon of mass destruction. I'm not sure if there is enough historical data to predict the process for an LNG tanker, but what history has shown is that liquid fuel tankers rarely explode -- sometimes, but rarely. Even during the North Atlantic convoys in WW-II, tankers were a big problem because the usual chain of events was that the tanker would be hit, and then burn hugely and brilliantly, with towering flames sometimes hundreds of feet high, for a long time, illuminating the rest of the convoy as if in daylight. Burning tankers would often be sunk by their own escorts, if possible, to try to protect the rest of the convoy. |