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CSB Releases Final Report Blaming Corporate Oversight for Deadly 2024 Louisville Plant Explosion

LOUISVILLE, Kentucky — The National Chemical Safety Board has released its final report regarding the deadly 2024 Givaudan plant explosion, characterizing the fatal event as a catastrophe in the making. The federal findings point to a series of operational failures and structural missteps by the company that led to the tragedy, which devastated the local Clifton neighborhood.

The explosion occurred in November 2024 on Payne Street, killing two workers, injuring 11 others, and severely damaging dozens of nearby homes. For the residents who lived through the disaster, the release of the federal report provides confirmation of their long-standing safety concerns but does not signify an immediate end to their ongoing recovery efforts.

According to the U.S. Chemical Safety Board investigators, the blast was directly caused by an overwhelmed pressure relief system on a chemical reactor originally manufactured in 1978. The aging reactor had been modified and reinstalled at the Clifton facility just three years prior to the fatal failure. Local residents, some of whom were displaced from their homes for up to six months following the shockwave, noted that the report clearly attributes the accident to a profound lack of oversight by Givaudan itself.

This was not the first fatal incident at the facility. A previous deadly explosion occurred at the same factory site in April 2003, resulting in the death of a worker while the property was under different corporate ownership.

With the federal investigation now finalized, the future of the disaster site rests with local lawmakers. The local Planning Commission voted 8-to-1 last month to recommend rezoning the property from heavy industrial use to commercial manufacturing. This regulatory shift would effectively bar heavy industrial operations from returning and open the doors for future residential or mixed-use developments.

The full Metro Council is scheduled to vote on the rezoning recommendation next week. Neighborhood advocates are urging city council members to listen closely to the community, arguing that heavy industrial factories do not belong in residential zones and that alternative developments would drive better economic growth, safer traffic patterns, and higher tax revenue for the area.

In addition to the report findings, the Chemical Safety Board issued an urgent recommendation advising Givaudan against placing any future production facilities near residential communities. The federal agency is also calling for immediate, comprehensive safety reviews at all of the company's other active manufacturing plants. Meanwhile, displaced residents note that Givaudan corporate executives have still failed to directly reach out or provide meaningful remediation to the affected households.

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By: NBC Palm Springs

May 28, 2026

Givaudan plant explosionChemical Safety Board reportLouisville factory blastClifton neighborhood rezoning
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CSB Releases Final Report Blaming Corporate Oversight for Deadly 2024 Louisville Plant Explosion