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The Binghamton state office building PCB, dioxin and dibenzofuran electrical transformer incident: 1981–1986
Authors:Arnold Schecter
Institution:

Department of Preventive Medicine, Upstate Medical Center, Clinical Campus, State University of New York, Binghamton, New York 13901, USA

Abstract:The Binghamton State Office Building (BSOB) polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) and chlorinated benzene containing electrical transformer arcing and fire incident of February 5, 1981, was the first recognized incident of its kind. A surge of excess electricity led to an electrical panel malfunction at 5:30 AM. For about 30 minutes intense heat was generated as electrical arcing occurred. Dense smoke containing polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs) and polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs) as well as biphenylenes billowed up through air shafts and contaminated all areas of the building later tested for these chemicals. This incident was the first outside a laboratory setting to demonstrate the conversion of PCBs, in the presence of oxygen and heat, to PCDFs, and of the chlorinated benzenes to PCDDs. It demonstrated a hitherto unsuspected potential health hazard of PCB and chlorinated benzene containing electrical transformers, and by implication, capacitors, when not properly separated from areas of buildings used by workers and public. The building has been shut since then and an estimated $40,000,000 may be spent on direct cleanup and rehabilitative costs prior to reopening of the building, if it is to be reopened. Elevated levels of serum PCBs were detected in workers, eg., firefighters initially involved in the fire, which stabilized at lower levels later in the year. Elevated penta- and hexa- chlorinated furan isomers corresponding to isomers found in the soot (and identical to some Yusho isomers) were found in some cleanup workers. Electron microscopy of percutaneous liver biopsies of three patients chemically exposed from the incident showed lesions similar to those seen in guinea pigs fed the soot, which was biologically quite active. This incident, and others occurring afterward, has led the US Environmental Protection Agency to ban PCB containing transformers from similar buildings.
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