Heh, 36 000 kg would actually be a partially filled 12 m container, and for 2 GJ half a ton of TNT wouldn't do the job unless you presume perfect detonation...
Anyway, amspire, a crashing aeroplane has more kinetic energy, is built out of materials which can be significantly more flammable, and yet the main cause of any fire or explosion is still the fuel and not the materials themselves, so for you to worry about aluminium and steel is rather interesting to say the least... Additionally aluminium is actually harder to set on fire than iron in a pure oxygen atmosphere. (Which I always found interesting.) Additionally your explosives vs. energy released calculation is off.
But lets go with your 50 000 kg assumption, have you considered how much of that energy goes into deforming/moving the materials involved? You're acting as if we're dealing with a theoretical immovable tunnel wall with an infinite yield strength and an object slamming into it in a perpendicular fashion. And even then the result is surprisingly less damaging than you'd expect. Remember that test footage of that F4 jet slamming into a concrete wall at 750 km/h? You're looking at something with about 300 MJ of kinetic energy slamming head-on into a concrete wall there, and that took place in less than 100 ms. And yes I know the wall moved during that test, but what they forgot to tell you was that it was placed on air bearings for that test and you could have probably pushed it forwards with a few folks...