Bangkok Post

Two likely causes of explosion that killed three, says council

- SUTTHIWIT CHAYUTVORA­KEN

The Council of Engineers Thailand (CoE) is investigat­ing the gas pipe explosion which killed three women in Samut Prakan’s Bang Bo district on Thursday.

It has been reported that the blast and widespread fire that resulted from it were caused by natural gas leaking from the pipe leading to the Asia Industrial Estate Suvarnabhu­mi about 1pm.

The explosion caused nearby residents to flee and some of their homes were seen engulfed in flames.

The blast also injured 66 people, of whom 37 had been discharged from hospital by yesterday evening.

CoE president Suchatvee Suwansawat said yesterday that while initial inquiries showed that the pipe was damaged, causing high-pressure fuels to leak out and explode, the reason for the pipe’s damage was not yet known.

Based on engineerin­g principles, Mr Suchatvee said there were two likely causes for the damage: a deteriorat­ion of the gas pipe or an external trigger, perhaps machinery.

However, a gas leak should have been hard to cause, Mr Suchatvee added, for two reasons.

First, the pipe was laid under a line of high-voltage cables and people would have been warned to steer clear of that

area. Also, the pipe also had been laid four metres undergroun­d, more than double the normal depth of 1.5 metres.

Therefore, people should wait for the result of a proper examinatio­n, Mr Suchatvee said, adding: “If something damaged the pipe, it must be a machine which was able to drill down

four metres.”

Although the gas pipe had been laid correctly for the safety of everything near it, Mr Suchatvee said the signs warning people of an undergroun­d gas pipe should have been bigger and installed every 100 metres.

In addition, he said, the council is

also concerned about the rapid expansion of the district.

The Energy Ministry has therefore been asked to share the layout of the gas pipes with the Interior Ministry and other department­s to prevent residentia­l areas being allowed to expand nearby.

Energy Minister Supattanap­ong Punmeechao­w, permanent secretary of energy Kulit Sombatsiri and PTT president and CEO Auttapol Rerkpiboon yesterday visited the victims and conveyed their condolence­s.

Mr Auttapol said the oil and gas company would cover the medical costs of those injured and all other damage, especially property damage.

Besides paying the medical bills and compensati­on for the damage, the families of the deceased would each receive five million baht compensati­on, he said, while the severely injured would receive 500,000 baht each, hospitalis­ed victims would be paid 200,000 baht each and those who were injured but not hospitalis­ed would get 50,000 baht.

Apart from the human casualties, the explosion damaged 34 houses, 62 cars, 59 motorcycle­s and seven shops.

PTT is appraising the damage ahead of approving compensati­on for those affected.

Moreover, the company is working with Samut Prakan provincial officials to provide accommodat­ion, food, water and other essential items to the affected residents forced to take shelter at Wat Preng Ratbamrung.

Mr Auttapol PTT had complied strictly with “ASME B31.8”, the universal standard for the transmissi­on and distributi­on of gas through undergroun­d pipes, and these had always been checked to ensure they remained sturdy and secure.

He said an initial investigat­ion of a parallel pipe had found nothing wrong but he pledged that his company would speedily establish the cause of the fatal explosion.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF PTT PLC ?? PTT Plc president and CEO, Auttapol Rerkpiboon, offers basic necessitie­s to a woman yesterday as he visits residents affected by the gas blast.
PHOTO COURTESY OF PTT PLC PTT Plc president and CEO, Auttapol Rerkpiboon, offers basic necessitie­s to a woman yesterday as he visits residents affected by the gas blast.
 ?? SOMCHAI POOMLARD ?? Burned out cars and houses are seen near the site of Thursday’s gas pipe explosion in Samut Prakan’s Bang Bo district yesterday.
SOMCHAI POOMLARD Burned out cars and houses are seen near the site of Thursday’s gas pipe explosion in Samut Prakan’s Bang Bo district yesterday.

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