Hindustan Times (Noida)

1k shifted amid Assam well blowout

- Utpal Parashar utpal.parashar@htlive.com

GUWAHATI: Around 1,000 people have been evacuated from the vicinity of an Oil India Limited (Oil)-operated well at Baghjan in Assam’s Tinsukia as natural gas and condensate matter continued to leak from it for the fourth day on Saturday following a blowout on Wednesday even as authoritie­s continued efforts to bring the situation under control. The well is located near the Dibru Saikhowa National Park, which is home to endangered species like Gangetic dolphin.

Residents said the blowout could have long term consequenc­es for the area. The recovery of a Gangetic dolphin’s carcass in the

Maguri wetland close to the well has heightened these fears.

“The dolphin did not have any injury marks and its skin was peeled off. People have noticed oil in Maguri wetland, which could have spilled from the well. Because of the blowout, there is a layer of oil like substance dripping from trees and roofs of houses in the area,” said Binanda Hatibarua, who lives near the well and visited the site.

Tinsukia deputy commission­er Bhaskar Pegu said the Park’s core area is located around 1 km from the well and there is no threat to it. “But the eco-sensitive zone outside the park is around 300 metres away from the site and we have got reports that oil condensate have fallen on the wetlands in that area,” he said.

Officials said a blowout means uncontroll­ed release of crude oil or gas from a well when pressure control systems fail. Condensate is a low density hydrocarbo­n generally found with natural gas.

In a statement, OIL said the blowout happened while work was underway to produce gas from new oil and gas-bearing reservoir at a depth of 3,729 metres. It said food and other support was being provided to the evacuees and that continuous monitoring is underway to minimise any environmen­tal impact.

OIL officials said the process to contain the leakage was underway and measures like adequate water supply, proper lighting, and transporta­tion of heavy equipment to the site have to be put in place before the operation to control it can be started.

“A lot of preliminar­y work needs to be done to enter the well site...it would take at least another two days to reach the well and try and contain it,” said OIL spokesman Tridiv Hazarika.

Chief minister Sarbananda Sonowal on Friday called Union petroleum minister Dharmendra Pradhan and urged him to take immediate remedial measures.

On May 11, the Union forest, environmen­t and climate change ministry had given clearance for extension drilling and testing of hydrocarbo­ns at seven locations by OIL under Dibru-saikhowa National Park area, minutes of the meeting revealed.

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