BISMARCK, N.D. -- A shipment of oil involved in an explosive train derailment in North Dakota had been treated to reduce its volatility -- a move that state officials suggested could have reduced the severity of the accident but won't prevent others from occurring.

Hess Corporation spokesman John Roper said the 180,000 gallons of oil involved in the accident complied with a state order requiring propane, butane and other volatile gases to be stripped out of crude before it's transported. That conditioning process lowers the vapour pressure of the oil, reducing the chances of an explosive ignition during a crash.

Despite the treatment of the crude in Wednesday's accident, six cars carrying a combined 180,000 gallons of oil caught fire in the derailment 2 miles from the town of small Heimdal in central North Dakota. The town was evacuated but no one was hurt.

The state volatility standard went into effect last month. It came in response to a string of fiery oil train accidents, including a 2013 derailment in Lac-Megantic, Quebec that killed 47 people and a derailment and a derailment and fire near Casselton, North Dakota last year.

Members of Congress have called for a stricter, national volatility standard for crude moved by rail.

Roper said the Hess shipment was "fully in compliant with North Dakota's crude conditioning order." It was tested immediately prior to loading onto a BNSF Railway train in Tioga and had a vapour pressure of 10.8 pounds per square inch -- well below the 13.7 pounds per square inch maximum under the state standard.

Reducing the explosiveness of the crude moved by rail was not supposed to be a cure-all. Federal regulators last week announced a new rule that calls for stronger tank cars better able to withstand a derailment and more advanced braking systems to help keep fuel-carrying cars on the tracks.

"Our oil conditioning order in no way will prevent an accident," said Alison Ritter with the North Dakota Industrial Commission, which set the vapour pressure standard. "Oil is still going to burn. That's why the oil was produced. But it's not as explosive."

The first witness on the scene Wednesday, 68-year-old Heimdal resident Curt Benson, said he heard and felt an explosion in his house and then witnessed three or four more explosions when he got to the scene. He said it was nowhere near the magnitude of the Casselton explosions, which he saw on television footage.

"I would say that ours was somewhat minor compared to theirs," Benson said.

Casselton Fire Chief Tim McLean said Thursday that the disaster outside of that city appeared much worse than the Heimdal incident but that there were many other factors to consider than just the volatility of the oil. The Casselton derailment involved more than twice the amount of crude and different kinds of tanker cars, he said. Another freight train, carrying soybeans, also was involved in Casselton and provided more fuel for the fire.

Democrats in Congress contend more needs to be done to reduce the danger of oil shipments by rail that pass through more than 400 counties including major metropolitan areas such as Seattle, Chicago and Philadelphia.

"Why do we let trains with this volatility pass through every day? Why are we letting these guys get away with that?" U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell, a Washington state Democrat, said in an interview last week after federal regulators unveiled the braking and tank car rule. The rule did not address oil volatility.

The National Transportation Safety Board was investigating the cause of the wreck. Spokesman Keith Holloway said board investigators were on the scene Thursday but no conclusions had been reached.

BNSF vice-president Mike Trevino did not immediately know early Thursday how much of the oil burned and how much was left in the cars once the fire was extinguished. But he expected the operation to transfer the oil to trucks to wrap up by midday.

Once the NTSB has cleared the site, the derailed cars can be removed, and this should happen by Thursday evening, Trevino said.

Officials are trying to determine how much oil spilled onto the ground and to get it cleaned up, Trevino said.

The rail line through Heimdal runs next to an intermittent waterway known as the Big Slough, which drains into the James River about 15 miles downstream. Some oil got into the slough, but it was contained and was being recovered, state Emergency Services spokeswoman Cecily Fong said early Thursday.

The tank cars that burst into flames were a model slated to be phased out or retrofitted by 2020 under a federal rule announced last week. It's the fifth fiery accident since February involving that type of tank car, and industry critics responded to the latest with calls for them to be taken off the tracks immediately to prevent further fires.

For residents of Heimdal and surrounding Wells County, which oil trains cross daily, the disaster was the realization of something they always feared might happen, County Commission Chairman Mark Schmitz said.

"It's definitely been in the back of everybody's minds," he said.