Electrical plant catches fire

subscribe

A sprinkler system saved a midtown Toronto electrical plant from more severe damage after a four-alarm blaze broke out early in the morning of April 3, according to fire officials.

“The fire was coming through the roof, but fortunately the building was protected by sprinklers… that’s one of the reasons there’s not that much damage,” said Andrew Kostiuk, division commander with Toronto Fire Department. “Sprinklers are good for holding it in check before we can put the fire out.”

The fire broke out at Lincoln Electric of Canada on Wicksteed Ave., in the Eglinton Ave. E. and Laird Dr. area, just before 3:30 a.m.

After battling the flames for several hours, fire crews were still at the scene at 8:30 a.m., attempting to put out a stubborn spot on the asphalt roof.

“The fire came through the roof. We're spraying water on it right now. The water continues to run off the asphalt,” Kostiuk said.

It will take another few hours before the owners of the plant are allowed back inside to assess the damage, he added.

There were about 20 workers inside the plant when a partition wall caught fire, but all managed to make it out of the building uninjured.

Investigators believe the fire may have been triggered by maintenance work last night on one of the plantÂ’s production lines, Kostiuk said.

“It’s not an arson,” Toronto police Staff Sgt. David Eustace said. “It’s just an accidental fire.”

By 4 a.m., the fire had jumped from a two-alarm level blaze to three-alarm.

Shortly after, it appeared the fire was out, until it started spitting flames again around 4:30 a.m., Eustace said.

At one point, all firefighters had to exit the building as the flames burst through the roof of the large industrial complex, Toronto Fire Capt. Mike Strapko said, adding, “The structural integrity could have been compromised in the roof area.”

At 5:30 a.m., the fire jumped to the fourth alarm level.

After going through a defensive fight with the fire, crews were able to bring it under control and down to the first-alarm level by 7 a.m.

“We had 30 fire units on scene, about 100 firefighters,” Strapko said just after 7 a.m. “Most of them have cleared up."

On its website, Lincoln Electric describes itself as “the world leader in the design, development and manufacture of arc welding products, robotic welding systems, plasma and oxyfuel cutting equipment.”

Surrounding buildings werenÂ’t evacuated and there were no reports of firefighters being injured.

The investigation is continuing and Toronto fire estimates damage to be about $200,000.

This is the second major fire in the last three months on Wicksteed Ave. On Jan. 31, more than 100 firefighters were called to a frozen food storage plant after a fire jumped to five alarms, the highest level.

Residents in the area were advised to keep their windows closed, while motorists reported smoke drifting onto the Don Valley Parkway near Eglinton Ave. E.

Some firefighters were treated at the scene for minor smoke inhalation.

Related News

frisco solar power

Flowing with current, Frisco, Colorado wants 100% clean electricity

FRISCO - Frisco has now set a goal of 100-per-cent renewable energy. But unlike some other resolutions adopted in the last decade, this one isn't purely aspirational. It's swimming with a strong current.

With the resolution adopted last week by the town council, Frisco joins 10 other Colorado towns and cities, plus Pueblo and Summit counties, in adopting 100-per-cent goals.

The goal is to get the municipality's electricity to 100-per-cent by 2025 and the community altogether by 2035. The language of the resolution specifies that this goal is for electricity only.

Decarbonizing electricity will be far easier than transportation, and transportation far easier…

READ MORE

This kite could harness more of the world's wind energy

READ MORE

houston

In a record year for clean energy purchases, Southeast cities stand out

READ MORE

electric vehicles

Coronavirus puts electric carmakers on alert over lithium supplies

READ MORE

florida power crews at work

FPL stages massive response to Irma but power may not be back for days or weeks

READ MORE