The Bridge of the Americas (originally known as the 'Thatcher Ferry Bridge') is a soaring cantilever bridge that the United States erected over the Pacific entrance to the Panama Canal in 1959, and it opened for traffic in 1962. It was the first permanent road link between North, Central, and South America.
Today, over 35,000 cars a day pass over the bridge, and traffic has gotten so heavy over the years that a parallel sister span - the Centennial Bridge - opened in 2004 to help carry the local vehicles as well as that section of the Pan-American Highway. Apparently, even with the two large bridges operating, the area is known for being a complete traffic bottleneck for a good portion of any given day.
This is what the view normally looks like as you reach the height of the 384 feet rise above the Canal.
In a terrifying twist, this is what it looked like for bus commuters yesterday, a bit after 4 in the afternoon.
WATCH 🔴
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) April 7, 2026
Passenger footage captures a bus crossing the Panama Canal as fuel tanks erupt in explosions nearby. https://t.co/kF9YFE80Gr pic.twitter.com/oMTTFd90ux
There's always that one guy who sits there, completely oblivious, with his cell phone pointed at whatever disaster is rolling in.
Always.
The bridge is closed at present for inspection, while the Panama Canal remains open - that part is very important.
It turns out that, for whatever reason these things happen, directly beside this vital vehicle lifeline on a shipping channel that is absolutely critical for international commerce and energy security, they have a natural gas or propane storage and transfer facility.
There are other fuel farms for what looks like oil storage scattered around behind the southern bridge landing on the satellite view.
Seems like an iffy proposition, doesn't it? But there it is, and this is what happened yesterday from a different vantage point.
WILD FOOTAGE 🔴
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) April 6, 2026
A tanker blast near the Bridge of the Americas in Panama City ignited a major fire that spread to 2 additional storage units at the Balboa tank facility. Reports of 3 injuries, no foul play suspected (as of now) pic.twitter.com/GeAcicCVQe
There is another view of the usual traffic jam approaching the bridge, but with a fireball rising in the distance.
Sal Mercogliano has some of the same astonishing video and a breakdown of what it meant for shipping in the immediate aftermath, which thankfully turned out to have had little to no impact on the marine traffic.
The Canal Authority has confirmed that operations were unimpeded by the blast.
...The Panama Canal Authority reported the explosion had no impact on the canal.
The Bridge of the Americas was closed after the incident, and was set to undergo inspections Tuesday to determine if it was damaged by the blast.
Tragically, the scene was far different on the tank farm near the foot of the bridge.
A powerful explosion near a major bridge close to the Panama Canal has left one person dead and multiple people injured.
The fuel tanker blast caused apocalyptic scenes, with passengers on a bus crossing the Bridge of the Americas coming close to being engulfed by the fireball and clouds of smoke.
Passengers could be seen getting up from their seats and moving quickly away from the windows as the flames and black smoke appeared to close in on them just after 4pm yesterday.
The man killed is believed to be an employee at a complex where tanker trucks are supplied with fuel.
Firefighters took three hours to put out the blaze and make the area safe.
A spokesman for Panama's Fire Brigade Service confirmed: 'Unfortunately, a person has died, possibly a collaborator of the company, who was trapped at the time when the fire and subsequent explosion of tanker vehicles occurred.
He said two of the people injured were civilians and the other two firefighters who were 'out of danger.'
More than 70 firefighters and 45 emergency response vehicles were sent to the scene in an initial mobilisation.
At first, given everything going on in the world, including friction over the Panama Canal ports and their operations, suspicions ran high that there might be ill intent behind the explosion.
But all current indications are that it was yet another horrible, deadly workplace accident during a fuel transfer from a tank to a tanker.
Right next to a steel bridge over one of the most critical waterways in the world.
Makes you think as you heave a huge sigh of relief.
Beege ADDS: More views of the explosion now available from Panama City, Panama traffic cameras.
Reportan explosión e incendio cerca del Puente de las Américas. Emana gran cantidad de humo. Se detuvo el tráfico en ambos sentidos. pic.twitter.com/tCAjofFRTz
— Tráfico Panamá (@TraficoCPanama) April 6, 2026
An explosion and fire are reported near the Bridge of the Americas. It is emitting a large amount of smoke. Traffic has been stopped in both directions.
OOF!
They've got some clean-up to do.
Those fuel tanks have always been there pic.twitter.com/Y9u2Wf4fQQ
— Paco L. Wrillo (@XArquitecto) April 7, 2026
It could have been so much worse.
Several folks have also asked why the bridge is 'critical,' and this is what I answered:
If it's, God forbid, compromised or a fire has to be fought from the water, or worse, a section drops into the Canal?
As well, when the Canal is in a low water drought, I would imagine that the shipping companies kick up traffic over the bridges exponentially as they transition to what they call a 'land-bridge' model to move their cargo from one end of the Canal to the other. Not all the ports are on the same side of the canal as the railcars that traverse the isthmus, and they have to get the cargo from port to rail by 'dray trucks.' Or sometimes they rely on trucks esxclusively. Those bridges are the only way to get across the Canal.
https://www.freightwaves.com/news/the-panama-connection-by-truck-and-rail-not-canal
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