In a similar thread below discussing this same issue, someone posted this.
– Dried milk plant – Idaho fire 10-21
– Food processing plant fire San Antonio 12-21
– JBS beef plant fire 12-21
– Mississippi poultry feed mill boiler explosion 12–21
– Hamilton Mountain poultry processing plant fire 1-22
– LeCompte Feed mill fire, Louisiana 1-22
– Bonanza meat company fire El Paso, Texas 2-22
– Shearer’s Food Plant Fire, Oregon 2-22
– Mauston Wisconsin River Meats fire 2-22
– Food bank in Maricopa county Arizona- food pantry 50,000 pounds of food destroyed by fire 3–22
– Nestle fire Arkansas. 3-22
– Walmart distribution Center fire 3–22
– Potato processing plant Penobscot, Maine 3-22
– Sherbrooke, Canada food processing fire 4-22
– Fire grain elevator plant fire, Kansas 4-22
– Fertilizer plant fire 4-22
– Azure Standard fire 4-22
*** – Walmart distribution Center fire 3–22***
This was a local event for me, and we still haven’t heard what happened. It burned the place to the ground. There’s almost nothing left of the facility, just a few cinder blocks.
My husband is in the third party logistics business, and building warehouses is one of the things he does. This shook him t9 his core, and he still has gotten no “insider” information on that. It’s all under wraps.
The potato processing plant in Maine was in the coastal city of Belfast, not Penobscot, which is a small town near historic Castine.
The name of the potato processing plant is Penobscot McCrum.
The fire started in one of the fryolator machines in the middle of the night.
I never heard any claims of arson being involved.
The plant will be rebuilt, according to the owners.
I happen to notice a similarity in the dates, as being either the twenty first or twenty second. Why ?
Ii would be interesting to see how this compares to any incidents in 2020 and 2019.