Norway: Explosion at hydrogen filling station

hydrogen-station-h2-station-brand-sandvika

In Sandvika near Oslo, an explosion occurred at a hydrogen filling station for fuel cell cars on Monday. Until establishing the cause of the incident, the supplier Nel has closed ten more stations.

+ + Kindly see our updates below + +

According to Norwegian media, the explosion took place on Monday around 5:30 pm at the Uno-X station in the Oslo suburb of Sandvika. According to the company, no one was injured but one report mentions two minor injuries.

“It is too early to speculate about the cause,” Nel boss Jon André Løkke said in a telephone interview. “Our top priority is the safe operation of the stations we supply. As a precaution, we have temporarily closed ten more stations until further information is available.” According to the portal E24, the closed stations are located across Norway, Denmark and other countries.

The drivers of fuel cell vehicles in Norway will probably have some difficulties in the coming days, as Uno-X is the leading supplier in the country. It is not yet clear how long the H2 filling stations will be out of service.

Two experts are said to have flown in from Denmark during the night to advise the rescue forces on site and support the authorities in their technical investigations.

The operating company Uno-X Hydrogen is a joint venture of Uno-X, Nel and Praxair. They inaugurated the station in November 2016 as the first of a new generation of filling stations developed by Nel. In addition to requiring less space, it is a new layout that distinguishes this type of station: Due to the improved cooling of the hydrogen, the pump can be placed up to 50 meters away from the other components.

Update 15.06.2019: H2 refuelling stations manufactured by Nel have been closed for the time being as a precaution after the explosion at a hydrogen filling station in Norway four days ago. According to H2 Mobility, four stations in Germany are affected by this measure.

Update 01.07.2019: The hydrogen leak was caused by an improperly installed plug. More details here. Investigations are ongoing to find out what ignited the leak.

tu.no, e24.no (both in Norwegian)

6 Comments

about „Norway: Explosion at hydrogen filling station“
Silvain Buche
12.06.2019 um 11:31
This does not look like a Hydrogen fire?
Daniel
20.06.2019 um 12:15
Hydrogen fire would be over very quickly. Here you are just seeing the filling station itself burning.
Andrew Breiter-Wu
02.10.2019 um 19:26
You are correct. Possibly it ignited the structure of the fueling station that is burning.
Colin Megson
24.06.2019 um 15:49
It looks as if the roof has blown off:"...Hydrogen collects under roofs and overhangs, where it forms an explosion hazard; any building that contains a potential source of hydrogen should have good ventilation, strong ignition suppression systems for all electric devices, and preferably be designed to have a roof that can be safely blown away from the rest of the structure in an explosion..."And our Government, in the UK, want us to use it in our homes for heating and cooking instead of natural gas:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_safety
mike
26.06.2019 um 15:48
any news on this?
Chris Heath
07.06.2021 um 11:03
So, they think its ok for houses? "Any building that uses hydrogen should preferably have a roof that can be blown away." I'll stick with electric, for now...

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