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UH Mānoa

An Ungrounded Tank, a Wrong Pressure Gauge, and a Postdoc's Severed Arm at the Hawai'i Natural Energy Institute

HIhazmatemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On the morning of March 16, 2016, 29-year-old postdoctoral researcher Thea Ekins-Coward suffered traumatic amputation of her right arm and lost an eye when a 49-liter tank containing a pressurized mixture of hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide exploded inside the Hawaiʻi Natural Energy Institute biofuels lab at UH Mānoa. A static-electricity discharge through an inappropriate digital pressure gauge ignited the flammable mixture. The blast also damaged the laboratory's interior partition walls and shattered a window.

Alerts
3
Response
8 min
Killed
0
Injured
1
Institution
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Public R1 · HI
~18,000 studentsUH Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 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 ALERTPhone
Explosion in laboratory at Pacific Ocean Science and Technology Building, UH Manoa. Female adult, traumatic amputation of upper extremity. HFD and EMS responding code 3. Building partially evacuated by occupants.

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

The 911 call to the Honolulu Fire Department was placed at approximately 10:23 AM HST on March 16, 2016, immediately after the explosion
The lab is located in the Pacific Ocean Science and Technology Building, which houses the Hawaiʻi Natural Energy Institute (HNEI)
Ekins-Coward was working alone in the lab at the time of the explosion, which the UC Center for Laboratory Safety later identified as a contributing factor
UPDATEEmail
UH Alert: An explosion has occurred in a research laboratory in the Pacific Ocean Science and Technology Building. One researcher has been transported to The Queen's Medical Center with serious injuries. Honolulu Fire Department, HazMat, and UH security are on scene. The building is partially evacuated. Other UH Manoa operations continue normally. Updates will follow.

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

The Queen's Medical Center is Honolulu's Level I trauma center and the regional facility for major traumatic injuries
UH's institutional response notified the campus community via UH Alert and a same-day statement from the chancellor's office
Hawaiʻi News Now reported that the Honolulu Fire Department initially attributed the explosion to a pressure gauge 'not rated or designed' for use in a flammable gaseous atmosphere
FOLLOW-UPEmail
Statement from UH Mānoa: Our hearts go out to the researcher injured in this morning's laboratory accident at the Hawaiʻi Natural Energy Institute. She is in serious but stable condition at The Queen's Medical Center. The university has launched an immediate internal investigation in cooperation with the Honolulu Fire Department and Hawaiʻi OSHA. The affected laboratory will remain closed pending the investigation. Counseling services are available for affected lab personnel.

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

Hawaiʻi OSHA later fined the university $115,500 for 15 violations, the largest academic-lab safety fine in Hawai'i state history
The University of California Center for Laboratory Safety conducted an independent investigation that concluded the immediate cause was a static-electricity discharge igniting the ungrounded hydrogen-oxygen mixture
Ekins-Coward filed a $7 million lawsuit against UH in 2017 alleging negligence and inadequate safety oversight
Context

Background

On the morning of March 16, 2016, postdoctoral researcher Thea Ekins-Coward was working alone in a biofuels research lab in the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa's Pacific Ocean Science and Technology Building. Ekins-Coward had been combining hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide gases inside a 49-liter portable tank as feedstock for bacterial cell cultures. At approximately 10:23 AM HST, the tank exploded. She lost her right arm and was hospitalized for months. The Honolulu Fire Department's investigation initially blamed an inappropriate digital pressure gauge. An independent investigation commissioned by UH and conducted by the University of California Center for Laboratory Safety concluded that the immediate cause was a static-electricity discharge: the tank was ungrounded, the digital gauge served as a path to ground for the static charge, and ignition most likely occurred when Ekins-Coward — herself electrostatically charged — touched the metal housing of the gauge. The deeper systemic cause was a failure to recognize the explosive hazard of a confined hydrogen-oxygen mixture. Ekins-Coward had told her PI in February that she was sometimes shocked when she touched the tank, but no one followed up. Hawaiʻi OSHA fined UH $115,500 for 15 violations, the largest academic-lab safety fine in state history. Ekins-Coward filed a $7 million lawsuit in 2017. The University of Pennsylvania, Princeton, and other peer institutions issued safety alerts recalling the Hawai'i explosion as a cautionary tale. The incident drove sweeping reforms at UH and informed national academic-lab safety practice on grounding, gas mixing, and pressure-vessel monitoring.
Analysis

Key Findings

Two investigations reached different proximate-cause conclusions (pressure gauge vs. static discharge) but converged on the same systemic failure: no one in the lab understood the explosive hazard of a confined hydrogen-oxygen mixture
Ekins-Coward had reported being electrostatically shocked by the tank to her PI in February 2016, a month before the explosion; no follow-up was conducted
The University of Hawaiʻi issued a UH Alert and same-day chancellor's statement — a notable contrast to UCLA's silence after the 2008 Sangji fatality and Texas Tech's contained response in 2010, reflecting the post-CSB shift toward transparent lab-incident disclosure
Outcome
Ekins-Coward lost her right arm and an eye; she required months of hospitalization and rehabilitation and later sued UH for $7 million. The Honolulu Fire Department and the [University of California Center for Laboratory Safety](https://cdn.labmanager.com/assets/articleNo/8913/doc/34170/b23d4c6e-e02b-4f4c-8689-6bb2c83ece95-report-201-20uh.pdf) issued separate investigation reports. Hawaiʻi OSHA fined UH $115,500 for 15 safety violations. The Hawaiʻi Natural Energy Institute permanently revised its protocols for hydrogen/oxygen handling, and UH installed a system-wide chemical hygiene and lab inspection program.
Provenance

Sources

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Tags
lab-explosionhydrogenbiosafetyhneielectrostatic-dischargeuh-manoaekins-cowardacademic-lab-safetypressure-vesselamputation
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion