Reports & Studies

The following reports provide additional information and insights into the tragedy in Bhopal, India.

Investigation of Large-Magnitude Incidents: Bhopal as a Case Study (152KB PDF), Ashok S. Kalelkar, Arthur D. Little, Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA, May 1988.

Union Carbide: Disaster at Bhopal (136KB PDF), by Jackson B. Browning, Retired Vice President, Health, Safety, and Environmental Programs, Union Carbide Corporation, Copyright 1993.

Madhya Pradesh Pollution Control Board's press release announcing it had taken over control the Bhopal plant, July 28, 1998.
 

Environmental Studies of the Bhopal Plant Site

The Bhopal plant closed after the 1984 gas release and never resumed normal operations. The Indian Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), the Indian courts and the Madhya Pradesh Pollution Control Board (MPPCB) closely monitored and controlled all activity at the site.

No steps were taken to remediate the site while the Bhopal disaster litigation was in progress. The CBI considered the methylisocyanate (MIC) unit “evidence” in the criminal case and blocked access to it. However, after the global settlement, numerous environmental studies were conducted through the years, sponsored variously by the Madhya Pradesh State Government, MPPCB, Union Carbide India Limited (UCIL), various other Indian governmental agencies, Indian environmental firms and non-governmental organizations (NGOs). These studies tried to determine the extent of any soil and groundwater contamination at the site, whether groundwater in neighboring areas was contaminated and, if so, what had caused it. A chronological overview of the various investigations follows.