So you respond to a MVA that has a small fuel spill that ignites right in front of you. No worry, you have a charged hose line on the ready and you have your firefighter extinguish the fire using the hose line. Problem is that the fire isn't going out... In fact, the fire is actually floating on top of the water! Is this possible?
With the addition of ethanol in our fuel, and we are talking 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline, you better have a plan B to deal with this type of event that I predict will become more and more prevalent as ethanol fuels become more commonplace.
Why ethanol fuels? Environmental testing over the years revealed that fuels containing MTBE (methyl tertiary butyl ether) actually enable the petrochemicals to penetrate deeper into the soil, sometimes reaching underground water source called aquifers.
Other problems with what we know as gasoline includes emission issues that go away when using ethanol based fuels. The byproducts are non-hazardous when using alcohol based fuels which makes ethanol fuel seem like the cats meow for everyone... but us.
Traditional firefighting techniques and extinguishing agents WILL NOT WORK on ethanol based fires. Alcohol floats on water, which means the more water you apply, the better the chances of making a static incident go dynamic. Ask Baltimore FD about the tanker fire on an overpass where water and AFFF were used to attempt to extinguish the fire. The tanker overflowed, with the flaming product (ethanol) spilling over the overpass to the street below, igniting car after car as the water carried burning ethanol moved downhill.
Now consider a smaller incident involving a MVA (motor vehicle accident) with a small fuel spill. Suddenly, "POOF!" a small fire starts. Is it ethanol? If it is, there is a chance that unless you use a dry chem or have AR-AFFF (alcohol resistive aqueous film forming foam) then you might have a problem...
My suggestion and overhead question to those reading this post is to think outside of the box with me and be proactive (not the acne medicine). Would it hurt to use AR-AFFF proportioned for a water can extinguisher, typically carried on our engines for the just in case scenario that I described above involving a small fuel spill that can go critical without the appropriate extinguishing agents...
Can you imagine not being able to put this fire out?
"Failure to prepare is preparing for failure... Be prepared..."
CBz
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