New Delhi:A crucial two-week delay in getting foreign experts to tackle a gas leak may cost Oil Indian Limited (OIL) dearly now besides the loss of lives of two OIL firefighters and the loss of property after a gas leak incident in oil-rich eastern Assam which has turned a 1.5 km radius area looking like a scorched warzone.
Because during this time, the gas leak has 'blown out' into a towering inferno, public protests have erupted because of the fire, survival of the ‘Maguri Motapung’ wetland lies in question while the ecology of the sensitive Dibru-Saikhowa National Park has been substantially damaged.
At 10:30 AM on May 27, well number 5 in Baghjan locality near eastern Assam’s Tinsukia town started to leak gas during ‘workover’ operations carried out by a Gujarat-based oilfield services company M/s John Energy. And from Saturday, the cold and humid weather became hot and dry. On Monday, the gas leak caught a spark and a catastrophic fire started razing everything it faced to ashes.
In oil exploration, ‘blow-out’ is the uncontrolled surge of oil or gas from a well. ‘Workover’ is the performing of major maintenance or remedial measures in oil or gas wells.
While OIL has suspended two of its employees for negligence on Wednesday, it had already issued a ‘show cause’ notice to M/s John Energy besides setting up a five-member inquiry committee to look into the disaster.
Set up in 1987, John Energy operates in about 2,500 oil wells. The company set up a new vertical of natural gas dehydration in June 2014 after the gas leakage in GAIL’s KG-Basin pipeline in the East Godavari district of Andhra Pradesh.
Read:Two firefighters die, over 1,610 families displaced in gas well blowout blaze in Assam