Bhopal Gas Tragedy Case
Bhopal Gas Tragedy Case
Bhopal Gas Tragedy Case
INTRODUCTION
On the night of 2nd-3rd December, methyl isocyanate (MIC) a deadly gas
leaked over the city of Bhopal from the plant of union carbide India
limited(UCIL) at Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh which manufactured pesticides. It
leads to several thousand deaths and more than 500,000 people being exposed
to MIC and other hazardous chemicals and causing a disaster which is
sometimes referred to as the world’s worst industrial disaster. The chemical
spill turned the UCIL factory into a gas chamber. The people were running,
dying, vomiting. The city ran out of cremation grounds. The government had no
idea on how to help the affected people. The plant was controlled by UCIL
which is a subsidiary of the used based company UCC (Union Carbide
Corporation), which provided negligible help to deal with the ongoing tragedy.
The main problem was nobody knew anything about its antidote or how to treat
the toxin. The disaster resulted in people suffering from ailments such as
anemia, tuberculosis but nobody could find the complete health effects caused
by MIC and how to treat it. The treatment research was even more complicated
by the fact that children born to mothers who were exposed to the gas were also
the victims of the release. Another factor which makes it worse is that till date,
even after 32 years there has been no closure in the report on what actually
caused the disaster. Negligent management and poor maintenance standards
being observed caused the routine pipe maintenance to backflow of water into
the MIC storage tank triggering the disasters claimed by the government and the
local activists, while at the same time UCC still claims that it was caused by
water entering the tank due to some act of sabotage.
Pre-Leak Phase
The UCIL factory started its production of the pesticide sevin in 1969 using mic
as an intermediate. A plant was set up in 1979 to produce MIC. The chemical
process used in the Bhopal plant controlled a reaction of methylamine with
phosgene to form MIC, which was further reacted with 1-naphthol to give the
final product known as carbaryl.
Earlier leaks
In 1976, there were complaints of pollution by the production employees of the
plant.in 1986, a maintenance employee was splashed with phosgene and died
within 72 hours.in 1982 24 workers inhaled phosgene gas and were admitted to
a hospital and another 18 workers were affected. A chemical engineer in august
1982 suffered 30% burns over his body on coming in contact with liquid MIC.
Later that year there was another MIC leak in 1983 and 1984 there were several
leaks of hazardous gases such as MIC, chlorine, phosgene and
monomethylamine. Hence these kinds of occurrences were not uncommon in
the UCIL plant and it was not a safe working place