
Garden Grove chemical leak escalated after it first began Thursday, officials say
Orange County Fire Authority crews and Garden Grove police initially responded around 3:30 p.m. Thursday to GKN Aerospace at 12122 Western Ave. due to a chemical that became overheated inside a 34,000-gallon tank containing a toxic chemical used in plastic manufacturing, causing the tank to begin venting vapors and triggering a sprinkler system designed to spray water on the tank to cool the material inside. The tank is located in proximity to two other storage tanks.
Evacuation orders were initially issued on Thursday, but they were lifted Thursday night when crews believed they were making progress in mitigating the situation. But Friday morning, the orders were re-instituted "due to changing conditions," according to the OCFA.
As the morning wore on, the situation worsened, preventing mitigation efforts completely, and the evacuation zone was expanded to create a roughly one-mile buffer area around the tank.
OCFA Division Chief Craig Covey said told reporters he went home Thursday night feeling authorities were making significant progress controlling the situation, but then he received a call at 4 a.m. reporting the situation had worsened. The main issue was a faulty valve on the compromised tank, which prevented crews from being able to access or offload the chemicals inside. Crews were also unable to introduce a stabilizer to neutralize the material.
By later Friday morning, authorities said one of two options is imminent: the 7,000 gallons of toxic chemicals inside the tank leak out, or the tank blows up.
City News Service contributed to this report.





