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Home / The Country

Liquid sulphur spill along 44km of Whangārei roads

Imran Ali
By Imran Ali
Multimedia Journalist·Northern Advocate·
17 Jul, 2018 06:00 AM3 mins to read

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Bright yellow liquid sulphur spilled for more than 41km from Ruakaka to Ballance site on Port Rd in Whangarei. Photo/Michael Cunningham

Bright yellow liquid sulphur spilled for more than 41km from Ruakaka to Ballance site on Port Rd in Whangarei. Photo/Michael Cunningham

An equipment failure caused 400kg of liquid sulphur used in fertiliser mix to spill off a moving tanker from Ruakākā to Whangārei.

The spill happened about 6.30pm on Thursday when a 24-ton tanker was transporting the pure sulphur over 41km from the Marsden Pt Oil Refinery to Ballance yard on Port Rd.

Whangārei police and firefighters helped Ballance staff clean up the worst of the spill along the intersection of State Highway 1 and Rewa Rewa Rd on Thursday evening while the rest will wash off by itself.

The Northland Regional Council is investigating the spill and had not made a decision by edition time last night on what, if any, enforcement action it would take.

Spilled liquid sulphur on the road leading up to the main gate at Ballance on Port Rd in Whangarei.
Photo/Michael Cunningham
Spilled liquid sulphur on the road leading up to the main gate at Ballance on Port Rd in Whangarei. Photo/Michael Cunningham
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Ballance site manager in Whangārei, Mark Adams, said the spill was really disappointing as it was the first time it has happened in the 32 years the company has been transporting pure sulphur from the refinery.

Liquid sulphur is a by-product of the refinery used by Ballance in fertiliser mixes. Adams assured the public the bright yellow product was pretty benign and that motorists should simply wash it off if the sulphur came into contact with their vehicles.

"The welding in the tank had failed but it shouldn't have leaked as the tank is welded pretty well. A hole the size of the little finger developed in one of the welds that connects to the trailer,'' he said.

"The driver wasn't able to see at that time of the evening. The spill built up when he stopped at the lights by Harvey Norman and that's where we cleaned up as much as we could on Thursday evening."

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Adams said the leak started at the intersection of Port Marsden Highway and SH1, not from the refinery itself.

"It was one those things that happened as a result of equipment failure. That was an eight-year-old tank and we've taken it off the road and will look into it. We've had over 50,000 loads in the last 32 years and we've never had this problem," he said.

NRC group manager regulator services Colin Dall said the council was notified of the sulphur spill by a Ballance staff on Friday.

Regional council staff inspected sections of the road affected by the spill and observed some residual sulphur on the road. Any adverse environmental effects from the residual sulphur are considered to be minor, he said.

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New Zealand

Liquid sulphur spilled for 44km

18 Jul 09:00 PM

NZ Transport Agency Northland system manager Jacqui Hori-Hoult said the sulphur was non-toxic.

"We swept the road and employed Hydrotech to waterblast and watercut the solid sulphur from the road surface particularly at the intersections where the truck had stopped, allowing a build-up of the sulphur to occur."

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