A failed cooling system may have triggered the dangerous chemical emergency at a Garden Grove aerospace company that led officials to evacuate roughly 50,000 residents, according to interim Orange County Fire Authority Chief TJ McGovern.

Authorities said a pressurized storage tank holding 7,000 gallons of methyl methacrylate, a highly flammable liquid used in plastic manufacturing, began heating up after the cooling mechanism stopped working for reasons still unknown.

“We don’t know why, but it stopped cooling,” McGovern told the Los Angeles Times on Tuesday.

Aerial view of water being sprayed onto an overheated 34,000-gallon chemical tank at an aerospace plant in Garden Grove. Getty Images
A pressurized tank filled with methyl methacrylate is sprayed with water at GKN Aerospace in Garden Grove. MediaNews Group via Getty Images
Water is sprayed on a tank that overheated at an aerospace plant in Garden Grove. AP Photo/Ethan Swope

“So that’s what started this event, to where the product heated up … and that’s how this whole response started. We’re just now being able to get to the tanks, so there’s definitely more to come of what caused it.”

The crisis erupted Friday when officials feared one of three chemical tanks at the aerospace facility could explode in a catastrophic boiling liquid expanding vapor explosion, or BLEVE, a blast capable of causing major destruction across the surrounding area.

Food and beverages are distributed outside a shelter for evacuees from an area affected by a chemical incident involving a leaking tank of methyl methacrylate, a flammable liquid used in the aerospace industry, in Fountain Valley. REUTERS

The threat prompted mass evacuation orders affecting more than 50,000 people.

Aerial view of emergency personnel spraying water on a tank to contain a chemical spill at GKN Aerospace Transparency in Garden Grove. Getty Images

But after further inspections over Memorial Day weekend, crews discovered the tank had developed a crack that lowered internal pressure, easing fears of a massive explosion.

“Yesterday we really turned a corner,” McGovern said.

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