Rajasthan CM Visits Fire-Hit Refinery, NIA Probes Blaze at Modi's Inauguration Site

Rajasthan Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma visited the Pachpadra Refinery in Balotra a day after a massive fire broke out in its Crude Distillation Unit. He conducted a review meeting and was accompanied by Cabinet Minister Jogaram Patel and Chief Secretary V. Srinivas. The National Investigation Agency (NIA) and state agencies had already reached the site for inspection prior to the CM's visit. The fire, which caused no casualties, has led to the postponement of the refinery's inauguration, which was scheduled to be performed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Key Points: Rajasthan Refinery Fire: CM Visits, NIA Probes, Modi Inauguration Postponed

  • CM reviews fire site
  • NIA and state agencies probe blaze
  • No casualties in incident
  • PM Modi's inauguration postponed
2 min read

Raj CM visits fire-hit refinery in Balotra; NIA, state agencies inspect site for probe

Rajasthan CM Bhajan Lal Sharma visits Pachpadra refinery after major fire. NIA inspects site, inauguration by PM Modi postponed. No casualties reported.

"Any technical shortcomings will be identified and rectified. Efforts are being made to make the refinery operational again at the earliest. - Jogaram Patel"

Jaipur, April 21

A day after the massive fire at the Pachpadra Refinery in Rajasthan's Balotra district, Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma visited the site on Tuesday and conducted an extensive review of the situation.

He held a detailed meeting with officials for nearly two-and-a-half hours and inspected the exact location where the fire had occurred.

The Chief Minister arrived at the refinery around Tuesday noon and was accompanied by Cabinet Minister Jogaram Patel and Chief Secretary V. Srinivas.

Prior to Chief Minister Sharma's arrival, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) and state investigative agencies had already reached the site.

Security was significantly enhanced at the refinery premises, with strict restrictions on entry at key gates.

Officials from central and state agencies reached the site prior to the Chief Minister's arrival.

Minister Jogaram Patel said a committee has been constituted to investigate the incident.

"Any technical shortcomings will be identified and rectified. Efforts are being made to make the refinery operational again at the earliest," he added.

The fire broke out on Monday around 2 p.m. in the Crude Distillation Unit.

Massive flames and thick smoke were visible from several kilometres away.

Firefighting teams worked for nearly two-and-a-half hours to bring the blaze under control. No casualties were reported.

The refinery, built at an estimated cost of Rs 79,459 crore, was scheduled to be inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on April 21.

However, the event was postponed following the incident.

Extensive preparations were underway for more than a week.

A large dome structure was erected at the public meeting venue, located around 800 metres from the refinery, with arrangements made for nearly two lakh people.

On Tuesday, dismantling of the temporary structures began.

Officials indicated that only a limited portion of the refinery has been affected.

Teams from the Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Limited (HPCL) are currently assessing the extent of the damage.

Minister Patel added that a detailed technical report will be prepared and necessary corrective measures implemented.

A new date for the refinery's inauguration is expected to be announced soon.

Former Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot termed the incident "unusual" for a new refinery and called for a thorough investigation, raising concerns over how such an incident could occur at a newly constructed refinery.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Thank God there were no casualties! The firefighting teams did a heroic job. The scale of the project is massive, so even a "limited portion" being affected could mean huge losses. Safety audits for all such projects need to be stricter.
A
Ashok G
Gehlot ji is right to raise questions. A brand new refinery catching fire before inauguration is very unusual. Was there a rush to meet the PM's visit deadline? The committee must look into procurement and construction quality too, not just technical faults.
P
Priyanka N
My heart goes out to the workers and people living nearby. The smoke visible for kilometers must have been terrifying 😟. Hope the environmental impact is also assessed. Balotra already has water issues.
R
Rohit P
ज़्यादा चिंता की बात नहीं है। Accidents happen in industrial projects. The important thing is the response was swift and they are fixing it. Delaying the inauguration was the right call. Jai Rajasthan!
K
Kavya N
So much money invested... nearly 80,000 crore! A small lapse can cost the nation dearly. The committee's report should be made public. We need accountability, not just promises of corrective measures.
D
David E
Interesting to see the coordination between state and central agencies

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