Two people were taken to hospital and several nearby buildings evacuated after ammonia was detected at Jurong Marine Cold Storage on Fishery Port Road, Singapore’s Civil Defence Force confirmed.

  • Ammonia leak detected at ice supplier compound
  • Two people taken to Singapore General Hospital
  • Nearby buildings evacuated as precaution

What happened

Around 11:45 a.m. on June 29, 2026, Singapore’s Civil Defence Force received a distress call from Jurong Marine Cold Storage located at 11 Fishery Port Road regarding an ammonia leak. Upon arriving, hazardous materials specialists detected the gas within the site’s compound and promptly evacuated the area. As a precaution, adjacent addresses 9 and 15 Fishery Port Road were also temporarily cleared of occupants.

The leak was traced to a pipe within the premises, and the supply valve was shut off to seal the source. Two people exposed to the ammonia vapour were assessed on site and transported to Singapore General Hospital for treatment. By late afternoon, hazard detection confirmed no further leakage, allowing evacuated workers to return and normal operations to cautiously resume.

Why it feels good

The swift and professional response by emergency teams kept the situation under control and ensured public safety. The effective coordination between hazardous materials experts and rescue personnel allowed the leak to be contained quickly, minimizing health risks and disruption.

Knowing that safety protocols and rapid action can prevent larger incidents brings reassurance to residents and workers nearby. The transparent communication about the incident and timely updates foster public confidence in emergency management.

What to enjoy or watch next

Keep an eye on local news channels and official updates to stay informed about any follow-up investigations or safety improvements at industrial sites handling hazardous materials. This incident highlights the importance of awareness around industrial safety measures, particularly when gases like ammonia are involved.

For those interested in community safety or industrial operations, learning more about how emergency services handle hazardous leaks can be enlightening. Observing such coordinated responses can also encourage workplaces to reinforce their own safety standards and emergency preparedness.

Source assisted: This briefing began from a discovered source item from CNA Singapore Ground Up. Open the original source.
How Happy Read Daily reports: feeds and outside sources are used for discovery. Public stories are edited to add context, calm usefulness and attribution before they are published. Read the standards

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