Butcher Island houses a marine oil terminal of Mumbai Port Trust
MUMBAI: Efforts are still on to extinguish the fire that broke out at a fuel tank farm of the Mumbai Port Trust (MbPT) located on the Butcher Island off the east coast of Mumbai last evening, a top fire brigade official said here today.
The firefighters had brought the blaze under control, but “excessive heat” led to reignition at the tank around 4.30 am today, the official said.
According to officials, the fire had broken out around 5 pm yesterday when Mumbai and the surrounding areas witnessed thundershowers. However, no causality was reported.
“Excessive heat caused reignition around 4.30 am today. Firefighting as well as the cooling operations are on. Foam and other extinguishing agents are being used for the purpose,” Mumbai fire brigade chief PS Rahangdale said.
He said firefighters of MbPT as well as the fire brigade team are working in tandem to douse the blaze.
According to Mr Rahangdale, fire brigade personnel involved in the firefighting operation through the night have been relieved and new staff staff have been deployed there.
“There has been a good coordination between Mumbai fire brigade personnel and the MbPT fire service team. The fire brigade team had reached around 10 feet near the blaze-hit tank, but reignition at dawn has posed a new challenge before us. However, the blaze is under control,” he said.
“I am monitoring the operation. Because of the heat, the foam (used as an extinguisher) is not settling down, this is causing reignition. But overall, the situation is under control,” Mr Rahangdale said but did not specify how long the firefighting operation would continue.
“Our main challenge is to keep the other tanks near the affected one safe. So, on one hand our firemen are involved in cooling operations to keep other tanks safe, while on the other, they are also engaged in dousing the flames,” he told PTI.
Butcher Island houses a marine oil terminal of MbPT.
Oil tankers discharge crude at the terminal, and it is transported to refineries at nearby Mahul through submerged pipelines, port officials said.
After the fire broke out, vessels in the vicinity of the island have been moved to a distance as a precautionary measure.
A BPCL spokesperson had said yesterday that a lightning strike amid thundershowers was the apparent cause behind the fire. “A diesel tank caught fire due to the lightning and thundershowers,” he had said.
Manohar Rao, executive director and head of safety, BPCL, had said that prima facie, the cause of the fire was lightning, though further probe will be carried out.