The fire had started at an oil tank on Butcher Island off the eastern coast of Mumbai last evening.
"The fire is under control, and limited to one tank. As flames rage on top, we are evacuating fuel from the bottom and simultaneously putting water and foam to contain the flames," MbPT deputy chairman Y A Wanage told PTI this evening.
Wanage said the 30,000-KL tank, which was filled to capacity when it caught fire at around 4.30 pm yesterday, still has 20 per cent fuel at the top. Unless it burns out, the fire can not be doused completely.
It will take at least till tomorrow morning for the flames to die, he said.
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BPCL executive director and head of safety Manohar Rao said an external agency specialising in foam-spraying has been commissioned to help contain the fire faster. Necessary equipment is on the way from Vadodara in Gujarat, he said.
Wanage said the fuel in adjoining tanks is also being emptied as a precaution.
Port operations, especially on the liquid cargo side, are hit since yesterday, and as per the port authorities, they will resume tomorrow, he said.
Both Wanage and Rao said lightning strike was the cause of the fire, even as a detailed inquiry is underway. Mumbai and surrounding areas had received thundershowers yesterday.
Officials from the city fire brigade, helped by BPCL's own fire fighting unit and the port's in-house fire fighting personnel are jointly trying to extinguish the blaze.
"Firefighting as well as the cooling operations are on. Foam and other extinguishing agents are being used for the purpose," Mumbai fire brigade chief P S Rahangdale said.