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28 dead in
Saudi gas pipeline blaze
RIYADH—Twenty-eight people were killed when a fire broke out on a gas
pipeline in an oil-rich desert area of Saudi Arabia on Sunday, state oil
conglomerate Saudi Aramco said.
“Twenty-eight people, including five employees of Aramco, died,” a
spokesperson for the company told, without giving further details or
nationalities of the dead.
Aramco said that the blaze erupted on the Haradh-Uthmaniyah gas
pipeline, 30 kilometres (18 miles) from a major gas processing plant at
Hawiyah, as maintenance work was being carried out. The fire broke out
at 00:25 am (2125 GMT Saturday) and was later brought under control,
said a statement from Aramco, which runs the oil and gas operations of
the world’s top crude producer.
The incident in the oil-rich Eastern Province occurred while Saudi
Arabia hosts heads of state at a rare summit of the OPEC oil cartel,
which is due to wrap up on Sunday. “Necessary operational adjustments
have been made to the gas system to normalise operations to ensure
continuity of fuel supply,” the Aramco statement added.
Aramco did not specify how many people were killed or injured. A source
at the company said the exact toll would be announced later Sunday. An
industry source who asked not to be named said the gas carried in the
pipeline is fed into the domestic network, like all of Saudi Arabia’s
gas production, and is not for export.
The fire broke out while workers were welding a plate on to the
pipeline, the source said, adding that the gas plant was unaffected.
The Hawiyah plant is one of the major gas processing plants in Saudi
Arabia, built in the desert near the Al-Ghawar oil field, the world’s
largest, and south of the city of Dhahran, an oil hub.
The plant, which produces 1.4 billion cubic feet (39.6 million cubic
metres) of gas a day and cost four billion dollars to build, was
launched in October 2002 as the first to process only non-associated
gas. It produces enough natural gas to free up around 260,000 barrels
per day of Arabian Light crude oil for export.
In January 2004, Saudi Arabia inaugurated another major natural gas and
oil project in Haradh in the Eastern Province, including a gas plant
capable of delivering 1.5 billion standard cubic feet (42.4 million
cubic metres) per day of sales gas to the kingdom’s master gas system.
Saudi Arabia, which sits on more than a quarter of global oil reserves,
has proven natural gas reserves of 239 trillion cubic feet (6.76
trillion cubic metres), the fourth largest.
In July, four Asian workers died and 12 people were injured in a fire at
the kingdom’s Ras Tanura oil terminal on the Gulf. Aramco said the fire
at the North Product Terminal broke out while maintenance work was under
way and was brought under control within an hour. It did not affect
production or loading activities.—Agencies
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