LIVE | Silkyara tunnel collapse: Rescue ‘can go on for long’; landline set up for workers
NDMA member says advanced machinery is required to cut the stuck parts of the auger inside the tunnel and Air Force's help is being sought to airlift that
The operation to rescue 41 workers trapped in the Silkyara tunnel may take a long time with the auger machine for horizontal drilling facing repeated hurdles, and rescuers are now preparing to start vertical drilling, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said on Saturday.
The vertical drilling will start in the next 24 to 36 hours, NDMA member Lt Gen (retd) Syed Ata Hasnain said, adding the front part of the auger machine was broken and efforts are being made to retrieve those from the tunnel. “We need to have patience as it is a dangerous operation ... is operation main lamba samay lag sakta hai (this operation may take a long time),” he said, without mentioning any timeline for the completion of rescue operations.
According to Hasnain, this rescue operation is getting technically more complex every day.
Drilling at the collapsed portion of the Silkyara tunnel to rescue the trapped men halted again on Friday night after the auger machine engaged in drilling through the rubble to prepare an escape passage faced a hurdle, apparently a metal object, and busted.
The NDMA member said 47 meters of horizontal drilling have been done, and efforts are on to remove the broken part of the auger machine.
Other options
Rescuers are exploring other options such as drilling the remaining stretch manually and undertaking vertical drilling.
On the vertical drilling option, the NDMA member said that machines are being placed on a platform on top of the tunnel and vertical drilling operations will start in the “next 24 to 36 hours”.
The second fastest way (after horizontal drilling) to reach the stranded workers would be top-down (vertical) drilling of 86 metres, he said.
Hasnain also said that a 1.5-km access road to the top of the tunnel on the Silkyara side has already been built by the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) for starting vertical drilling.
“We need to have some patience. We need to understand that a very difficult operation is going on,” Hasnain said, and added two methods are being used currently, but a third method, that is drift method, may also be used.
“Operation can go on for long”
“As per the prevailing situation, we need to keep the pipe stable, remove the broken parts of the auger, prepare to begin the drift on the side, prepare for top-down drilling, and stabilize and strengthen the 41 brothers trapped inside and keep monitoring their mental well-being, since this operation can go on for long,” the NDMA member said.
He also said that advanced machinery is required to cut the stuck parts of the auger inside the tunnel, and the assistance of the Indian Air Force is being sought to airlift this machinery.
“Besides the two options being adopted now, we may perhaps adopt a third method of drift tunnel as well. However, there is no certainty about it yet,” Hasnain added.
The multi-agency rescue effort began November 12 when a portion of the under-construction tunnel on Uttarakhand’s Char Dham route collapsed following a landslide, trapping workers inside.
Asked to comment on micro tunnelling expert Arnold Dix’s remarks that the 41 trapped workers would come home by Christmas, Hasnain said, “When you look at any problem from a distance, then you get the correct picture. Wahan par se kisi ka yeh kehna ki 20 din ya 45 days lag jayega rescue karne me, toh main nahi samajhta hun ki woh shobha deta hai (It will be insensitive on the part of anyone to say that rescue operation to bring workers out will take 20 days or 45 days),” he added.
Asked if an environmental impact assessment (EIA) had been conducted for the project, NHAI member Vishal Chauhan said, “EIA of this project has also been done. Himalayan geology behaves differently...There are several things that cannot be predicted.”
(With agency inputs)
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Live Updates
- 25 Nov 2023 1:37 PM IST
'Vertical drilling more time consuming'
Efforts are also being made to create a vertical escape passage, officials said. A big drilling machine was moved towards the hill above the tunnel on Saturday morning where two lowest elevation spots have been identified by experts for vertical drilling. A 1.5-km access road to the top of the tunnel has already been built by the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) as the option of vertical drilling has been on cards for some time.
Vertical drilling is a more time-consuming and complicated option which demands more exactitude and caution due to narrower space available on top of the tunnel roof, international tunnelling expert Arnold Dicks had said a few days ago.
- 24 Nov 2023 2:07 PM IST
Uttarkashi (Uttarakhand) tunnel rescue: Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke to Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami on the phone today. Information was taken about the rescue operation...The PM also inquired about the condition of the workers trapped inside the tunnel and the food… pic.twitter.com/XUjxd6lvRx
— ANI (@ANI) November 24, 2023 - 24 Nov 2023 2:06 PM IST
#WATCH | Union Minister Gen. VK Singh (Retd) along with officials enter Uttarkashi's Silkyara tunnel where the rescue operation is underway to bring out the trapped workers. pic.twitter.com/rY7ADSQN49
— ANI (@ANI) November 24, 2023 - 24 Nov 2023 1:27 PM IST
Drilling to resume after 2 PM
Officials have said drilling will resume after 2 PM.
- 24 Nov 2023 12:38 PM IST
NDRF conducts evacuation rehearsal using wheeled stretchers
The NDRF on Friday conducted a rehearsal of how it would take its wheeled stretchers through the chute being prepared to rescue the 41 workers trapped inside the Silkyara tunnel.
An NDRF personnel went through the passage, pushing a wheeled stretcher tied to a rope at the end of the tunnel and was pulled back up after completing the stretch.
A passage has been made using 800 mm diameter steel pipes through the rubble at the tunnel to rescue the workers who have been trapped inside for the past 12 days.
An NDRF personnel who went into the passage was lying on the wheeled stretcher facing downwards.
There was enough room inside the pipes and he had no difficulty in breathing during the exercise, he said.
- 24 Nov 2023 11:14 AM IST
#WATCH | | Uttarkashi (Uttarakhand) tunnel rescue: NDRF demonstrates the movement of wheeled stretchers through the pipeline, for the rescue of 41 workers trapped inside the Silkyara Tunnel once the horizontal pipe reaches the other side. pic.twitter.com/mQcvtmYjnk
— ANI (@ANI) November 24, 2023 - 24 Nov 2023 10:36 AM IST
Drilling to re-start by 11-11.30: Former advisor to PMO
#WATCH | Uttarkashi (Uttarakhand) tunnel rescue | Former advisor to PMO, Bhaskar Khulbe says, "We hope that we will start the drilling by 11-11:30 am. Ground penetration radar study has shown that there is no metallic obstruction in the next 5 metres," pic.twitter.com/pKVUq5k2QU
— ANI (@ANI) November 24, 2023 - 24 Nov 2023 10:36 AM IST
Drilling to re-start by 11-11.30: Former advisor to PMO
#WATCH | Uttarkashi (Uttarakhand) tunnel rescue | Former advisor to PMO, Bhaskar Khulbe says, "We hope that we will start the drilling by 11-11:30 am. Ground penetration radar study has shown that there is no metallic obstruction in the next 5 metres," pic.twitter.com/pKVUq5k2QU
— ANI (@ANI) November 24, 2023 - 24 Nov 2023 10:36 AM IST
Drilling to re-start by 11-11.30: Former advisor to PMO
#WATCH | Uttarkashi (Uttarakhand) tunnel rescue | Former advisor to PMO, Bhaskar Khulbe says, "We hope that we will start the drilling by 11-11:30 am. Ground penetration radar study has shown that there is no metallic obstruction in the next 5 metres," pic.twitter.com/pKVUq5k2QU
— ANI (@ANI) November 24, 2023