Officials in Orange County, California, announced Monday that the immediate threat of a catastrophic explosion at a GKN Aerospace facility in Garden Grove had been ruled out after crews discovered a crack in a dangerously overheated chemical tank. The tank, which contained roughly 7,000 gallons of highly flammable methyl methacrylate, had triggered days of panic after pressure buildup raised fears of a devastating industrial blast capable of impacting nearby neighborhoods.

The emergency began around May 21 when authorities detected rising temperatures inside the tank, prompting firefighters to continuously cool the structure with water while evacuation orders forced nearly 50,000 residents from surrounding areas. Although officials now believe a massive explosion is unlikely, emergency crews warned that the possibility of a smaller blast or toxic chemical leak still remains as monitoring operations continue around the clock.

Methyl methacrylate, commonly used in plastics manufacturing, is known to pose serious health dangers including respiratory distress and skin irritation if released into the environment. The frightening incident has now sparked a district attorney investigation into how the tank failure occurred, while shaken residents and local leaders continue demanding answers over the industrial scare that placed an entire Southern California community on high alert for days.