Mass evacuation after China oil pipe blast

An oil pipe blast in Qingdao ripped roads apart, killed 47 people and left many sections of the Chinese city cut off from utilities.

A damaged road after a pipeline explosion in Qingdao

An oil pipeline has exploded in the Chinese coastal city of Qingdao, killing 35 people. (AAP)

Some 18,000 people have been evacuated from a Chinese coastal city after an oil pipeline explosion killed at least 47 people and sent thick black smoke billowing into the sky.

The Friday morning blast in Qingdao ripped roads apart, pictures showed, while leaving many sections of the city cut off from utilities.

The latest government report on Saturday did not explicitly state a reason for the evacuation, mention its timing, or whether people had been able to return to their homes.

But, according to official media, students from nearby schools and local residents were handed out masks over fears of possible toxic emissions.

The Global Times later reported: "Environmental monitoring shows that the concentration of toxic materials is within national standards".

The impact of the blast disrupted the supply of water, gas and electricity in parts of the city, with the government distributing 2000 candles on Friday night.

Authorities also provided 40,000 servings of free food for breakfast and lunch on Saturday.

Electricity has now been restored in all but two communities in the district, the local government said.

The pipeline, run by state-owned oil giant Sinopec, sprang a leak early Friday and exploded several hours later as workers sought to repair it, the Qingdao municipal government said in its verified account on Sina Weibo, a Chinese equivalent of Twitter.

Sinopec chairman Fu Chengyu told state television on Saturday: "(We) are deeply grieved, we express our deep condolences for the dead, our support to their families ... and our apologies to the whole country.

"(We will) find out the accident's causes as soon as possible and give a reasonable explanation to everyone."

Sinopec said that the pipeline, which was put into service in 1986, was 248 kilometres long and carried some 10 million tonnes of oil per year.

Authorities on Saturday also turned their efforts to containing the oil spill as it spread out into the sea over an area covering 3000 square metres.

Oil booms and 22 clean-up ships were deployed in the zone, tasked with spraying 10 tonnes of oil dispersants, reported the Xinhua news agency quoting local officials.

China has a poor record on industrial safety as lax law enforcement and corruption enables business owners to cut corners or offer bribes to evade standards.

Around 28,000 people were killed or went missing in workplace accidents in the first half of this year, state media reported.


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Source: AAP


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