Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘NTPC boiler blast debris was hot enough to melt a human’

- Sharad Deep and Rajesh Kumar Singh letters@hindustant­imes.com

ENGINEER DETAILS At the time of explosion, temperatur­e of steam was 140 degree Celsius UNCHAHAR (RAE BARELI)/LUCKNOW:

Death came suddenly for the labourers on a routine repair assignment on one of the boilers of the 1550 megawatt Unchahar thermal power plant which exploded Wednesday, leaving eyewitness­es shell shocked by the intensity of the destructio­n.

The 500 megawatt unit 6 of the power plant was commission­ed in April but duetotechn­ical fault in the boiler the unit failed to produce power.

The labourers were called to repair a fault after engineers detected that coal chunks were stuck in the pipe of the boiler. Suddenly at 3.30 pm hot gas and steam escaped from a corner of the boiler duct killing those near the boiler immediatel­y and covering them with hot ash. The bodies lay scattered at the spot.

EngineerLa­lmaniVerma­told HT that at the time of the explosion the temperatur­e of the steamwas14­0degreeCel­siusand pressure in the boiler was 765kg per square mm. “The heat is enough to melt a person. Around 40 labourers working very close to the boiler bore the brunt of the blast,” he said.

President of the UP Engineers Associatio­n, Shailendra Dubey said it was the first major blast in

SCAM

a power plant in the state in which large numbers of people have lost life. Boiler blasts have been reported in the state government run Obra, Panki and Haduaganj power plants but no deaths had been recorded.

For eyewitness­es, Wednesday’s disaster unfolded a macabre dance of death.

Ram Prakash, a labourer in Plant No 1 is worried about his friends Nanku and Pappu, who were on Plant No 6 where the boiler exploded.

Despite repeated efforts, the 35-year-old resident of Laxmipur Bazar, around 12-km away from the power plant, Ram Prakash was clueless about his friends.

“We had plans for a small get together this evening as it was Nanku’s birthday today, and Pappuhadto­cookanon-vegetarian meal for all three,” Ram Prakash told HT after searching both district hospital andJeevan Jyoti hospital on the premises.

Ram Prakash doesn’t have their addresses or any whereabout­s of their families. “We becamefrie­ndsafewmon­thsago as the plant number 6 is new and is being run on the trials basis. I don’t know what to do now,” he said, adding, “Yes, I sawaheapof dead and many badly burnt bodies. There were cries and voices for help even when I reached the spot almost 15 minutes after the incident.”

“It was a horrible scene. I saw some labourers dying while being taken to the ambulances. I haven’t seen such a tragic incident ever in my life,” he said.

Like thousand other daily labourers he is paid Rs 200 a day.

“Working in a plant, especially close to boiler is always dangerous, but there is no other option I have. I amthe only earning member in a family of four, and being uneducated, this is the only job I can do.”

“It was a risky affair to work onthatplan­tasitwasma­deoperatio­nal a month ago, and things were not safe,” claimed another eyewitness­DineshKaus­hal,who had refused to work on the Plant No 6 when the contractor had asked him to take the job.

It wasn’t only labourers who bore the brunt of the explosion. Some of the senior officials of the NTPC too were reportedly trapped in the fire.

“Yes. I saw a few officers also crying for help when the fire broke out in the plant, and I didn’t see them coming out of the plant thereafter,” Nalin Singh, another eye witness told HT at the Jeevan Jyoti hospital.

 ?? PTI ?? A scene at NTPC's Unchahar thermal power plant in Raebareli where a blast took place on Wednesday.
PTI A scene at NTPC's Unchahar thermal power plant in Raebareli where a blast took place on Wednesday.

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