Tag: Fuel tanker

  • Tanker crushes mother, child in Delta

    Tanker crushes mother, child in Delta

    Okada rider, two others in lucky escape

    Tragedy struck on Ifie Road in Warri South Local Government Area on Friday afternoon as a woman identified simply as Joy and one of her children were crushed to death by a fuel tanker.

    The deceased and her three children were said to be riding on a commercial motorcycle on their way home from school when the unfortunate incident occurred.

    According to reports, the motorcycle rider was trying to manoeuvre its way around the moving tanker when the accident occurred, leaving the woman and her child dead at the spot.

    Read Also: Tinubu’s vision, dedication to Nigeria inspiring – Akpabio

    It was learnt that the okada rider survived and escaped from the accident scene immediately.

    Some good Samaritans reportedly rushed the two other children to a hospital for medical care.

    Ifie and neighbouring Ubeji community are hosts to a number of tank farms.

    Reacting to the incident, residents of Ifie and Ubeji lamented the high level of recklessness by okada riders and the fuel tanker drivers in the area, just as they reiterated calls for such heavy trucks to move only at night.

  • Fuel tanker overturns on Oshodi-Gbagada Expressway

    Fuel tanker overturns on Oshodi-Gbagada Expressway

    A major disaster was averted yesterday after a tanker carrying Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) overturned on the Oshodi-Gbagada Expressway, spilling its highly flammable content across the main carriageway.

    The swift intervention of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) played a crucial role in securing the scene and preventing potential catastrophe. 

    The accident occurred opposite TREM Church, raising concerns over possible fuel ignition and the risk of unauthorised fuel scooping by bystanders.

    Read Also: NMDPRA bans 60, 000 litre fuel tankers from roads

    In a statement, LASTMA’s Director of Public Affairs and Enlightenment, Adebayo Taofiq, indicated that the agency’s operatives acted immediately, cordoning off the area to prevent public access and escalating the situation to the Lagos State Fire Service. Firefighters arrived promptly to manage the hazardous spill and reduce the threat of an explosion. 

    In a bid to maintain public safety and avoid traffic congestion, LASTMA officials, he explained, redirected vehicles to the service lane from Oshodi-Oke inbound Gbagada. This measure helped prevent gridlock while ensuring that motorists were kept away from the danger zone. 

  • JUST IN: Fuel tanker falls at Lagos community

    JUST IN: Fuel tanker falls at Lagos community

    A fuel-laden tanker has fallen at Obadeyi, Ahmadiya Bus Stop on Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway.

    Read Also: Reps want FG to channel fuel subsidy savings to healthcare

    The Nation gathered some miscreants are scooping the spilled content of the tanker.

    Details Shortly…

  • Otedola bridge fire: Fuel tanker, 17 other vehicles not insured

    The fuel tanker that exploded on the Otedola link bridge of the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway on June 28 was not insured, it has been learnt.

    The Lagos State Government and the Nigeria Insurers Association (NIA) found that the tanker did not have any cover.

    It was originally designed to carry 15,000 tons ring equipment before it was converted to a 33,000 liters capacity fuel tanker.

    Of the 54 vehicles burnt in the fire, only seven had comprehensive insurance, the Vehicle Inspection Unit (VIU) of the Lagos State Ministry of Transportation learnt through the Nigeria Insurance Industry Database (NIID).

    Thirty-one had third party insurance 17 had no cover.

    Vehicle Inspection Service (VIS) Director Hafiz Toriola, said at a Nigerian Council of Registered Insurance Brokers (NCRIB) Members Evening in Lagos, that the state fished out the truck owner and did forensic investigation on the accident.

    The state, he said, now have the equipment reveal the details of all accidents and vehicles on its road.

    He said: “Lagos State government has introduced advanced technology. We now have the equipment that reveals information on all vehicle manufacturers in the whole world. It is the first in Africa. It goes directly to the details of the vehicle. Once we know your chassis number or vehicle identification number, without seeing the vehicle, it will bring out the vehicle and its capacity. It is important for insurers to note this before insuring any vehicle on the road.

    “We also have equipment that will do thorough inspection of the vehicle and diagnose it. We have 10 computerised centres in the state that can scan and diagnose your vehicles for anyone who cares to check the fitness of his or her vehicle. By the end of this year, we plan to add another 10 while we aim to have one in all 57 councils across the state. But presently, we have computerised everything that has to do with inspecting vehicles and accidents in the state.”

    NIA Director-General Mrs Yetunde Ilori praised the government for finding the truck and other vehicle owners involved in the accident.

    The state, she said, provided the equipment that discovered the chassis number of the truck, adding that NIA detected the insurance status of the truck and other vehicles involved in the accident.

  • Fuel tanker explodes at Ecobank head office

    Fire yesterday swept through the head office of Ecobank Nigeria Ltd on Ahmadu Bello Way, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    The incident, which occurred around 8:30am, triggered the firm alarm, forcing workers and customers to flee.

    The fire started from diesel tanker that was discharging its content at the bank’s fuel dump. The dump and many shops close to the bank were destroyed.

    It took the combined efforts of firemen from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), United Bank for Africa (UBA), Julius Berger, Lagos State and Federal Fire Services to prevent the inferno from spreading to adjoining buildings and parked vehicles.

    Officials of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) and police cordoned off the area; the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) diverted traffic.

    A witness, Mr Malachy Okoli, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) correspondents, that the fire started when the tanker was discharging diesel at the dump.

    Okoli said staffers of other banks used their extinguishers to contain the fire before the arrival of fire fighters.

    Some youths were seen scooping diesel from the gutter.

    Federal Fire Service Lagos Command Deputy Commanding Officer Ganiyu Olayiwola said the bank alerted the command around 8.55am.

    “We quickly alerted our people and we were able to contain the fire, the first thing we did was to evacuate all the personnel and secure the area so that we would be able to perform our work effectively,” Olayiwola said.

    LASEMA Director of Operations Femi Giwa said: “At about 8.55 am, we got a distress call at the Lagos State command and control centre concerning an inferno within the Ecobank head office.

    “We activated our response and mobilised our responder to the scene.”

    He said the agency’s officials discovered that a tanker with 33,000 litres of diesel caught fire while transloading, adding “we need to appreciate the Lagos State Fire Service, the Federal Fire Service and LASEMA Response Unit, the Ecobank Fire unit, UBA fire unit, Julius Berger and others for their efforts.

    “We were able to contain the inferno within the generator area where they have the tank and the building, as I speak to you is in good condition and the adjoining buildings were not affected. Personnel and as occupants within the building are evacuated within the muster point. We recorded no injury, no death and as I speak to you we are at the dampening stage.”

    An Ecobank official, Tunde Dawodu, said the fire started at about 8.40 am, when a tanker that came to supply diesel apparently caught fire.

    Dawodu said: “Immediately we activated the emergency protocol and all staff were evacuated from the building even though it did not affect the main building.

    “We decided to fight it with fire gadgets that we had and we reached out to the fire departments, the state, the federal, LASEMA and some other corporate organisations. As you can see it is just the tanker and one of our generators that were affected, it did not affect the building, the personnel or our operations.”

    LASEMA General Manager Adesina Tiamiyu said: “We received a distress call at about 8:54am that there was fire outbreak. The agency mobilised to the incident scene immediately.

    “Upon arrival at the scene of incident, it was discovered that a 33,000-litre tanker laden with diesel caught fire while trans-loading its content around the generator house. The immediate cause of the fire was yet to be ascertained. However, investigation is being conducted to ascertain the actual cause of the inferno. No casualty was recorded. The inferno was completely brought under control. The main structure within the bank premises was also not affected.”

    Lagos State Fire Service Acting Director Musibau Rasaki said they got the information about the incident from the command and complaint centre at 8:55am.

    He said they quickly responded with two fire stations.

    Rasaki said: “We were the first fire station to get to the scene; others came and joined us shortly in less than five minutes. We deployed four trucks to the scene; two from Ibeju-Lekki and another two from Alausa and I was there to monitor the scene.

    “No neighbouring property was affected by the fire except for the tanker, the generator house and the transformer. The report that some properties were damaged is not true. No casualty was recorded; with the effort of all of us, the fire was put under control within a short time and I can confirm that as I speak with you everything has been cleared before I left the scene; what is left is just those on standby. LASEMA officials are also on standby in case of any emergency.  The fire is totally out. It took us over one hour before we put out the fire.”

  • Thousands stranded, as fuel tanker explodes on Kaduna-Abuja road

    Thousands stranded, as fuel tanker explodes on Kaduna-Abuja road

    Thousands of passengers either coming from or going to Abuja were yesterday stranded as a result of an explosion and fire at Tafa along the Kaduna-Abuja highway.

    It was gathered that the explosions occurred after a tanker loaded with petroleum products dodged collision on the highway with a commercial Golf car, skidded off the highway and resulting to fire and billowing smoke.

    It is too early to tell the number of casualties in the accident, but many are feared dead from inhaling the smoke, burnt by the fire, or as a result of the explosion.

    The spokesperson of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Yushau Shuaib, said a place of worship was burnt, but insisted that no life was lost.

    It was gathered that several houses were burnt in the area, but NEMA explained that quick intervention that saw to evacuation of the residents led to saving of lives.

    The ever busy Kaduna-Abuja highway links the Federal Capital Territory with the North West and North East, with thousands of vehicles plying it every day.

    It also links the North with the South through Lokoja, the Kogi State capital.

    Bad portions of the road cannot be ruled out as a cause of the accident on this very important federal road, which was rehabilitated earlier this year but went bad few months after

  • Fuel tanker fire sparks tears in Ibadan

    Fuel tanker fire sparks tears in Ibadan

    Traders, motorists and passengers had no inkling of what will befall them that early morning. Those who had retired to their homes after the previous day’s hustling were yet to get to their various trading posts. Some received phone calls to the effect that their shops had been burnt. WALE AJETUNMOBI reports that the fire, which claimed no life, was as a result of the carelessness of a Jigawa-bound truck.

    If this had happened at 8:00 a.m., we would have been packing burnt human bodies by now.” This was the response of Mr. Adisa Adeagbo, a commercial cab driver, after a fuel-laden tanker burst into flames in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital on Sunday.

    One unidentified person was burnt beyond recognition, while several commuters were injured as vehicles conveying them to various destinations caught fire. The incident happened at Oremeji-Agugu axis of Lagos-Ibadan Highway. No fewer than 30 road-side shops, four trailers and 12 passengers’ vehicles were razed.

    Traders, who owned the shops, broke down in tears when they arrived at the scene. None of the traders could pick anything, as all materials and goods kept in their shops were completely burnt.

    The incident, which happened at 6:30 a.m., was said to have been caused by Jigawa-bound truck, registered as KZR 418 XA, loaded with wheat.

    Southwest Report gathered that the truck lost control while on high speed as it attempted to overtake another truck laden with cartons of pasta, biscuits and noodles. The front section of the Jigawa-bound truck, eyewitnesses said, came off, ramming into a NIPCO fuel tanker parked on the road side.

    The fuel tanker burst into flames as its content spilled on the road. Commuters ran helter-skelter as diesel flowed from the tanker’s silo before it went up in flames. Petrol attendants at Fakinlayo Filling Station close to the scene shut the station and fled.

    Eyewitnesses said though some passengers tried to escape as there was pandemonium; some sustained some degrees of burnt in the ensuing uproar when the vehicles conveying them caught fire at the scene.

    Most of the road-side traders had not opened for business when the incident happened. Unquantifiable amount of goods kept in the shops were completely burnt.

    Nurudeen Alimi, who drove one of the razed trailers, with registration number JJJ 363 XB owned by a logistics company, relived how he escaped.

    He said: “I parked my truck on the road side to check a fault I noticed in the engine of my vehicle. Then, I sighted a wheat-laden trailer driving on top speed and attempted to overtake another trailer, which was moving at a normal speed. The wheat-laden trailer lost control and broke into two. The head rammed into a NIPCO tanker parked at a distant behind my truck and there was a loud bang.

    “Before I knew what was going on, the content of the tanker had started spilling on the road. I fled the scene, because I knew what would happen next. Just before I ran a few metres, the tanker went up in flames. From where I stood, I could see passengers of on-coming vehicles rushing down and scampering in different directions. Nobody died; but some of them were injured as they made attempt to flee the scene.”

     

    Traders’ lament

    Most of the traders were yet to come to terms with the tragedy that befell them. They arrived at the scene one after the other to count their losses. They were left with charred materials of their wares.

    A trader identified as Mrs Amope could not be consoled as she wept uncontrollably at the spot where her wooden shop was razed. “Where will I start again?” Mrs Amope said, adding: “I just bought goods to stock up my shop with money I borrowed. I have not even started selling the goods to enable me to repay the money given to me by my lenders. Everything has been burnt this morning.”

    Mrs Amope was led away almost naked from the scene by sympathisers.

    A lotto operator, Wale Olalere whose kiosk was razed, said he was still in bed when he got calls, informing him of the incident.

    “When I got the calls, I quickly got up and came here. As you can see, I cannot recognise the spot where I had my kiosk. Everything I left in the kiosk, including my lotto machine, has been burnt. I don’t know what to do now, because this is where I get my daily bread,” he said.

    Mrs Mosunmola Adesina, who sells alcoholic drinks, wept as she counted her losses.

    She said: “I have three shops here and I have lost everything to the fire. All my deep freezers, power generating set and the drinks have all gone. How do I start all over again?”

    The leader of Oremeji Market, Mrs Omotunde Grace, said the traders had complained to the government about the activities of trailers and fuel tankers in the area. She said the inferno would have extended to buildings close to the market if the tanker had been loaded with petrol. She urged the government to stop trucks and fuel tankers from parking close to the market.

     

    Looting by hoodlums

    While the inferno raged, some dare-devil miscreants swarmed on the shops and burning trailers to loot. The hoodlums attacked fire fighters from Oyo State Fire Service, who moved to the scene at 7:00 a.m. to put out the fire. The hoodlums looted cartons of pasta and noodles from one of the burnt trailers. The fire fighters got to work after a combined team of soldiers, riot policemen and Civil Defence Corps deployed to the scene dispersed the hoodlums.

    Adeleke Isiaka, who led the fire team said: “We responded to the distress call immediately and we got here in time. But 20 minutes after we arrived, we were prevented by hoodlums looting at the scene. We were able to put out the inferno within a few hours. I can confirm to you there was no life lost.

    For more than 10 hours, travellers were left stranded on the highway. Vehicles coming from Lagos diverted to the opposite lane, causing gridlock. Officers of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) had hectic time controlling the traffic.

    FRSC’s Oluyole Unit Commander, Mrs Titilayo Olayiwola, said investigation was ongoing to ascertain the cause of the incident.

    Police spokesman Adekunle Ajisebutu said: “Immediately we got the news, we contacted the Fire Service. But for the quick intervention of the firemen, the havoc would have been worst. We drafted policemen to the scene and the report we got is that 10 vehicles and several shops were burnt.

    Drivers of the Jigawa-bound trailer was said to have fled the scene.

     

  • Lagos fuel tanker fire leaves more than 30 homeless

    Lagos fuel tanker fire leaves more than 30 homeless

    • Residents, business operators count losses

    For years, Patrick Mbeh lived in fear of a fire disaster. His house, number 122, Lawanson Road in Lagos, is located beside a filling station. In the evening of Thursday, January 29, 2016, Mike’s fears were confirmed when the MRS filling station along the popular Lawanson road went up in flames after a fuel tanker exploded while discharging its contents.

    Speaking with The Nation, Mbeh, who claimed that he lost everything to the fire, said he was in the Ajah area of Lagos when he was called that his house was on fire. “I have lived here for around 30 years. Since I started living here, I always had the fear that one day, there might be fire outbreak. Unfortunately, my fears were confirmed on Thursday when the filling station went up in flames and spread to our house. i lost everything because my family could not rescue anything. I just thank God that nobody was killed.”

    A visibly distraught Mbeh said the residents of the building have been made homeless by the fire, calling on good-spirited Nigerians and the government to come their aid. “As you can see, we have all been made homeless. Aside from losing all our property to the fire, we presently don’t have where to lay our heads. I want to appeal to Nigerians and the government to please come to our assistance. They should help us so that we can have where to sleep.”

    Ironically, one of the offices in the destroyed building sold fire extinguishers. The company, Profile Ventures, was completely destroyed by the fire. A friend of the owner of the company, John Okhimhe, said the workers in the company were unable to evacuate the goods in the shop, as the rampaging fire quickly spread through the building.

    The fire, which eyewitnesses said started at about 5pm, destroyed everything in its path, including a residential building located beside the filling station, the fuel tanker and two cars parked inside the fuel station at the time.

    According to Rufus Olowoyeye, a taxi driver, whose parking lot is located adjacent to the filling station, the tanker was discharging fuel when it caught fire. “I was outside here when suddenly we heard a loud noise. When I looked, I saw that the filling station was on fire. All efforts to put out the fire were futile, as it quickly spread to the building beside the filling station. It was a very scary experience, as everybody ran for their lives.”

    The owner of the filling station, Reverend Boniface Williams, would not speak on the incident when The Nation called his phone number. The man of God, probably still in shock, simply refused to speak, saying: ‘’I don’t want to say anything for now.”

    The filling station was completely destroyed, leaving the carcass of the fuel tanker and two cars.

    But, aside Reverend Williams, the biggest loser to the fire is Celestine Elom, the owner of two different supermarkets located in the destroyed building. One of the shops sold wine and other sophisticated drinks, while the other sold general goods.

    Elom’s brother, who spoke with The Nation, said the fire caught the people by surprise. “We could not rescue anything from the shops. The fire started suddenly, and what anybody could think of at the time was safety. We just stocked the shops before this fire. It is a very big loss for us.”

    Mrs Adegbite’s shop is located a little distance away from the entrance of the filling station. In the last 10 years since she started her business, she had improved her business, selling assorted drinks and food. “I have been here for about 10 years now. I sold drinks and food, and it is from the proceeds from this business that I assist my family to make sure that our children receive good education.”

    But the fire has left the Adegbites inconsolable and unsure of what the future has in stock for their family. “I don’t know what to say for now,” she said amid tears. “As you can see, I was not able to take anything from the shop. The fire has destroyed us and we don’t even know what to do for now,” she added.

    53-year-old Mike Mbeh was at work when the fire that consumed his home started. His efforts to get back home to rescue some of his property ended in futility, as the house was completely destroyed by the time he got home. Mike said he is left with the only dress he had on before the fire.

    “I was not home when the fire started. It had destroyed everything before I rushed back home. For now, I don’t have any cloth to wear. The cloth I am wearing is the only one that I have left.”

  • UPDATE: Fuel tanker on fire at Lekki

    UPDATE: Fuel tanker on fire at Lekki

    A tanker loaded with Diesel on Tuesday afternoon caught fire at the Lekki area of Lagos.

    The tanker, according to a social media post from Lekki Concession Company (LCC), caught fire “few meters from Lekki round about.”

    The LCC said that the fire razed truck, said to be carrying Diesel has been extinguished as emergency services remain on ground and road diversion in progress.

     

  • Fuel tanker falls at Lagos airport

    Fuel tanker falls at Lagos airport

    There was panic at the Murtala Mohammed Airport in Ikeja, Lagos, yesterday when a tanker fell, spilling Jet-A1 popularly known as aviation fuel on the road.

    The tanker tumbled close to the airport’s access gate. Motorists, passersby and workers ran for cover.

    An eyewitness said the tanker with registration number AAA 991 XQ, fell when the driver wanted to negotiate a sharp bend.

    It was coming from Ikeja and heading for the international wing of the airport when the accident occurred around 10.am.

    Men from the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) fire service, Lagos State Fire Service, the Police and other emergency response agencies quickly mobilised to avert tragedy.

    The driver, the eyewitness said, was trapped inside the vehicle for over 30 minutes before he was pulled out by rescuers, who cut the steering.

    They said the driver was rushed to the Port Health Services for first aid.

    Other motorists were said to have fled, thinking that the spilled product was petrol.

    The eyewitness claimed that the driver was on high speed when the accident occurred.

    The accident caused massive traffic gridlock as vehicles were diverted from airport road to Beesam to enable passengers and workers access the international airport, Hajj camp and Cargo Terminal.

    Speaking to reporters at the scene, Lagos State Fire Service Leader Fatai Rafiu said the command received a distress call at 10:14am and fire fighters from the Mobolaji Bank Anthony Way in Ikeja responded immediately.

    The quick intervention of the team, he said, prevented what could have led to loss of lives and properties.

    He said the accident might have been caused by over-speeding.

    Rafiu said: “With my years of experience, which is about 32 years, I can say that the accident might have occurred because of over-speeding by the driver because the accident wouldn’t have happened just like that. Maybe the driver lost the control of the speed, but I can tell you that it was not a mechanical fault.”

    Mr Livinus Chukwuma, Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Lagos Airport Command, told NAN that officers were deployed immediately to the scene.

    The police, he said, also cordoned off the area and diverted people to use alternative routes.

    Meanwhile the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) has arrested no fewer than 74 tankers and trailers drivers.

    According to the Corps’ Lagos and Ogun States Zonal Commander, Assistant Corps Marshal Nseobong Akpabio, the indiscipline of the articulated trucks and trailers drivers warranted the need for the operation.

    The defaulters’ offence, he said, range from driving with worn-out tyres, possessing fake drivers’ licence, unlatched/unhooked containers, lane indiscipline, rickety vehicles and overloading.

    The exercise, tagged: “Operation Scorpion” focusing on reduction or total eradication of crashes involving heavy duty vehicles across the country.

    According to Akpabio, the objective of ‘operation scorpion’ is to deploy the human and material resources to ensure compliance.

    He said the bad habit of the hydraulic vehicles’ drivers on the roads is becoming unbearable.

    This, he described, has become embarrassment.

    The FRSC boss said mobile courts have been set up in conjunction with the concerned states’ judiciary.

    He urged corps marshals to exhibit high sense of discipline and competent throughout the exercise and adhere strictly to FRSC rules.