Indonesia state-run fuel depot fire kills at least 15, residents forced to flee | CBC News

Indonesian officials called for an investigation and an audit of state energy company Pertamina’s facilities after a fire at its storage facility killed 15.

The fire, which started at around 8 p.m. on Friday from a fuel pipe at Pertamina’s Plumpang fuel storage depot in capital Jakarta, quickly spread to nearby houses and sent residents in the densely populated area into panic.

Authorities initially put the death toll at 17 but revised it later to 15. Dozens were injured and more than a thousand people were displaced, police said on Saturday.

“I have ordered Pertamina to immediately investigate this case thoroughly,” State-Owned Enterprise Minister Erick Thohir said via his Instagram page.

“There must be an operational review.”

People mourn in a street after a deadly fire.
A woman is consoled as she weeps on Saturday in the residential area where homes were destroyed after a nearby fuel storage depot caught fire on Friday night. (Tatan Syuflana/The Associated Press)

The fire has since been extinguished, and Pertamina said it had lifted the emergency status for the facility and restarted distribution activities, adding fuel supply for Jakarta would remain secure.

Investigation was still ongoing to find out the cause of the fire, but the company said in a statement on Saturday that a pipe leak was detected prior to the fire.

The fire left dozens of houses and some cars charred. Some residents were seen returning to their homes to check the extent of the damages or to salvage their belongings from the debris.

A young man stands with his hands on his head before a destroyed home.
Muhammad Regi, 21, reacts on Saturday as he visits his neighbourhood, affected after the fire that broke out Friday night at a fuel storage station operated by Indonesia’s state energy company Pertamina in North Jakarta. (Willy Kurniawan/Reuters)

Some were going from one hospital to another, searching for their missing relatives.

Sugeng Suparwoto, who heads parliament’s energy committee, has called for an audit of Pertamina’s facilities.

“All facilities, whether refineries or storage, must be audited again,” he said on KompasTV, noting that Pertamina often had fire incidents at its facilities.

In 2021, a major fire broke out at Pertamina’s refineries in Balongan and Cilacap.

Narrow street separates facility from nearby homes

Sugeng also said there should be a bigger distance between Pertamina’s storage facilities and residential areas.

“For a facility with Plumpang’s capacity, there should be at least one to two kilometres distance with residential area.”

Plumpang depot, with a storage capacity of over 300,000 kilolitres, is one of Pertamina’s biggest fuel terminals.

A row of burnt homes.
People look at burnt houses in a residential area in Plumpang, North Jakarta, on Saturday, after a fire the night before at a nearby state-run fuel storage depot run by energy firm Pertamina. (Aditya Aji/AFP/Getty Images)

A dense residential area stands outside the Plumpang’s outer wall, separated only by a narrow street, a Reuters witness said.

Local residents could smell the fuel around 30 minutes before the fire, Abdul Syukur, who lives nearby, told KompasTV.

“The smell was so strong there were people throwing up and some nearly fainted,” he said.

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