Some days are not boring.
You read about them in the news.
At 12:39 a.m. on March 26, 2024, the container ship Dali left the Port of Baltimore. The departure was unremarkable. Fifty minutes later, the Francis Scott Key Bridge was in the Patapsco River, six men were dead, and one of the busiest ports in America was closed.
The physical cause was a single wire in a single terminal, a connection that had passed visual inspection three days earlier because it looked exactly like a good one. The ship had blacked out twice at the berth, hours before it sailed. Nobody investigated. Fifteen months earlier, another vessel managed by the same company had blacked out for the identical reason. None of it delayed the departure.
None of it is unusual. The Unboring Day is about what disasters look like from inside the organizations that produce them, in the years when they are still preventable. Drawing on accident inquiries, court records, regulatory filings, and engineering investigations, it traces twenty-one of the most consequential industrial disasters of the past half century and finds the same thing behind nearly all of them: warnings, documented and ignored. Reports filed in drawers. Inspections deferred. Regulators captured. Budgets cut, then cut again. Whistleblowers thanked, filed, and ignored.
Flixborough. Bhopal. Piper Alpha. Grenfell Tower. Space Shuttle Columbia. Texas City. The Morandi Bridge. The Boeing 737 MAX. Champlain Towers. The OceanGate Titan. Lac-Mégantic. East Palestine. Buncefield. Fukushima.
Seven parts, each a different mechanism by which institutions drift toward catastrophe: temporary fixes that become permanent, alarms that sounded and were treated as noise, cultures in which bad news could not reach the people who needed it. The final part is Bhopal, in full, from the first cost cut to the last casualty.
The most dangerous thing about these disasters is how ordinary they looked from inside. Every one of them, at the time, was simply a Tuesday.
Written by a chartered chemical engineer with fifteen years on some of the largest industrial facilities ever built, The Unboring Day is for the engineers, inspectors, and regulators who keep the modern world running, and for everyone who depends on their work.
Companion volume to The Boring Day: What It Actually Takes to Keep the World Running.
A disaster is a process, not an event. By the time you can see one, it has been underway for years.