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UAF

Boiler Tube Failure Triggers Steam Flash at UAF Power Plant, Spraying Burning Coal and Cutting Heat to Campus for 90 Minutes

AKinfrastructure failureadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On April 21, 2016, a metal boiler tube in Boiler 1 at the University of Alaska Fairbanks power plant failed at 8:44 AM AKDT, filling the plant with steam and sending burning coal outside the boiler. The steam flash -- similar in physics to dumping water on hot coals -- was caused by a tube thinning over years of use. Four fire departments responded and the plant was restarted on an oil-fired backup boiler by 9:30 AM. Two people were evaluated but not injured; campus buildings lost heat and hot water for approximately 90 minutes during the frigid interior Alaska spring.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
University of Alaska Fairbanks
Public R2 · AK
~9,000 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTUnknown
Approximate reconstruction212 chars
UAF Alert: Boiler failure at the campus power plant, 1764 Tanana Loop. Power plant personnel have evacuated. Multiple fire departments are responding. Campus buildings are losing heat. Avoid the power plant area.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The boiler tube failure occurred at 8:44 AM AKDT on April 21, 2016, releasing pressurized steam that filled the power plant building
The power plant is located at 1764 Tanana Loop on the UAF campus in Fairbanks, Alaska
The steam flash also sent burning coal out of the failed boiler, creating fire risk inside the plant building
Four fire departments were dispatched: University Fire Department, City of Fairbanks Fire Department, Steese Volunteer Fire Department, and Chena Goldstream Fire and Rescue
ALL CLEARUnknown+46 min
Approximate reconstruction221 chars
UAF Alert Update: The power plant has been restarted using an alternate boiler. Heat and hot water are being restored to campus buildings. No injuries were reported. The cause of the boiler failure is under investigation.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Plant workers restarted operations using oil-fired Boiler 3 by 9:30 AM AKDT, approximately 46 minutes after the Boiler 1 failure
Campus buildings lost heat and hot water for approximately 90 minutes total during the incident
Two individuals were evaluated by emergency responders but neither suffered any injury
A nearly identical boiler tube failure had occurred at the same plant in December 1998, indicating a pattern of aging infrastructure vulnerability
Context

Background

At 8:44 AM AKDT on April 21, 2016, a metal tube in Boiler 1 at the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus power plant failed after years of gradual wall thinning. The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported that the tube failure caused a steam flash: the high-pressure water inside the tube flashed to steam when the tube wall gave way, filling the plant with hot steam and spraying burning coal out of the boiler -- a phenomenon analogous to pouring water on hot coals. Four fire departments responded: UAF's own fire department, the City of Fairbanks Fire Department, the Steese Volunteer Fire Department, and Chena Goldstream Fire and Rescue. By 9:30 AM, plant workers had shifted operations to oil-fired Boiler 3, one of the plant's backup units, restoring heat and hot water to campus buildings within approximately 90 minutes. Two people who were near the plant were evaluated by emergency crews but neither was injured. The incident was the second boiler tube failure at the UAF power plant with the same failure mode -- a nearly identical event had occurred in December 1998. UAF was already under contract for a $245 million combined heat-and-power facility replacement that would replace the aging coal-fired boilers.
Analysis

Key Findings

The boiler tube failure was caused by years of wall thinning -- a slow, predictable degradation mode that regular inspection and non-destructive testing can detect before failure
A nearly identical failure at the same plant in December 1998 suggests the tube inspection and replacement program was not fully effective at preventing recurrence
Four fire departments had to respond to a single utility plant failure, illustrating the regional mutual-aid burden that aging campus infrastructure can impose
UAF was already in the process of contracting a $245 million replacement combined heat-and-power plant at the time of the 2016 failure, acknowledging the end-of-life status of the existing coal-fired boilers
Outcome
No injuries. Plant restarted using oil-fired Boiler 3 by 9:30 AM AKDT. Heat and hot water restored to campus buildings within 90 minutes. Tube failure attributed to normal wear after years of use. Plant was already scheduled for replacement with a $245 million combined heat-and-power facility.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. Source
  3. News
Tags
infrastructure-failureboiler-failuresteam-flashcoal-plantalaskapower-plantno-injuriesfairbanksaging-infrastructure
Added June 2026Updated June 2026Via ingestion