CALGARY, Alberta — A train has derailed on a collapsing Canada bridge near Calgary, threatening to send five rail cars carrying a diesel-like substance into a river, officials said Thursday.
Efforts were under way to keep the cars from falling off the slowly sagging bridge and then pump out the yet-unspecified but potentially flammable liquid. No injuries were reported.
"It appears that the bridge is failing," said emergency management director Bruce Burrell. The train derailed after a section of the bridge dropped two feet (60 centimeters) Thursday morning.
Each car could have 80,000 pounds (36,000 kilograms) of flammable product, said acting Fire Chief Ken Uzeloc. He could not specify the liquid. A sixth car on the bridge is an empty oil tanker, he said.
Canadian Pacific spokesman Ed Greenberg said the bridge gave way after most of the eastbound train had crossed.
"The (derailed cars) are all upright," he said. "There are no leaks reported and no injuries reported as a result of the incident."
The bridge, southeast of downtown Calgary, typically sits about 25 feet (7.6 meters) above water level, though water levels remain high after last week's flooding.
Emergency crews were working to string a cable through the railcars to secure it to bulldozers on land to prevent the cars from being carried down the river in case the bridge gives way.