OSHA Cites U.S. Steel and Contractor After Fatal Clairton Coke Works Explosion
OSHA Cites U.S. Steel and Contractor After Fatal Clairton Coke Works Explosion
What Happened
In August 2025, an explosion at the Clairton Coke Works plant in Clairton, Pennsylvania killed two workers and injured twelve others. The facility, operated by United States Steel Corporation, is one of the largest coke production plants in North America.
OSHA opened an investigation immediately after the blast. On February 18, 2026, the agency issued citations to both U.S. Steel and MPW Industrial Services Inc., a contractor working at the site.
OSHA's Findings
The investigation found serious failures in safety management and energy control practices involving flammable gas:
United States Steel Corp.
- 7 serious violations and 1 other-than-serious violation
- Failed to use required safety management and energy control practices for hazardous work involving flammable gas
- Proposed penalty: $118,214
MPW Industrial Services Inc.
- 4 serious violations and 2 other-than-serious violations
- Did not provide a relief valve for a high-pressure water system
- Failed to coordinate energy control practices for hazardous work
- Proposed penalty: $61,473
OSHA identified three main hazard categories in the investigation: explosion hazards, struck-by hazards, and high-pressure injection hazards.
The Penalties and Next Steps
Combined proposed penalties total $179,687. Both companies have 15 business days to comply with the citations, request an informal conference with OSHA, or contest the findings before the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission. Penalties may be adjusted during the proceedings.
Lessons for the Chemical Industry
Coke production involves extreme temperatures, flammable gases (including coke oven gas, which contains hydrogen, methane, and carbon monoxide), and high-pressure systems. The Clairton case underscores several recurring themes in industrial safety:
- Energy control (lockout/tagout) is non-negotiable — The citations specifically mention failures in energy control practices for flammable gas work. OSHA's lockout/tagout standard (29 CFR 1910.147) remains one of the most-cited standards every year.
- Contractor coordination matters — When a site operator and a contractor share a workspace, both parties are responsible for communicating hazards and coordinating safety procedures. The citations against MPW show that OSHA holds contractors independently accountable.
- Pressure relief is fundamental — The failure to provide a relief valve on a high-pressure water system contributed to the hazard. Pressure relief devices are basic engineering controls that prevent catastrophic failures.
Alliance's Take
Incidents like the Clairton explosion are a sobering reminder that process safety requires constant vigilance. Every chemical facility — whether it handles coke oven gas, solvents, or water treatment chemicals — depends on the same fundamentals: proper hazard identification, engineering controls, and trained personnel.
Alliance Chemical supports safe operations by providing complete documentation with every product we ship. Our Safety Data Sheets include detailed handling, storage, and emergency response information. Certificates of Analysis verify product specifications so your team knows exactly what they are working with.
If you need chemicals with reliable documentation and supply chain transparency, contact our team at sales@alliancechemical.com.
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