Fire at Haldia Petrochemicals naphtha pipeline injures at least 20 in West Bengal
A predawn blaze at one of India's largest petrochemical complexes burned for hours; five workers are in critical condition and a nearby rail line was suspended
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Summary
A fire broke out at Haldia Petrochemicals' naphtha pipeline in Purba Medinipur district, West Bengal, in the early hours of June 30. More than 20 people were injured, five critically, including plant workers and security guards. Twelve fire engines worked to bring the blaze under control. The Haldia-Mecheda rail link was suspended as a precaution while crews operated near the track. The cause had not been established by morning, though one source cited an unauthorized naphtha-extraction point near the pipeline as a possible ignition site.
Why it matters
Haldia is one of India's oldest and largest integrated Energy complexes, handling petrochemical production and refining. A naphtha-line fire at that density of infrastructure carries cascading risk to both supply and community safety in Purba Medinipur, one of West Bengal's most industrially exposed districts.
What to watch
- Official casualty count and whether fatalities are confirmed.
- Whether the cause is traced to the reported unauthorized extraction point, which would raise industrial-security questions.
- Timeline for the rail link to resume.
- State government response and any regulatory action against Haldia Petrochemicals.