The fire which destroyed two paint factories in the Meru Industrial Park on Monday. File pic courtesy of the Fire and Rescue Department
The fire which destroyed two paint factories in the Meru Industrial Park on Monday. File pic courtesy of the Fire and Rescue Department

PUTRAJAYA: The Department of Environment (DoE) has placed two air quality measurement tools at SK Meru in Klang to monitor the aftermath of thick smoke release following a fire at a paint processing factory in Meru Industrial Park yesterday.

Its director-general, Datuk Wan Abdul Latiff Wan Jaffar, said that as of 8pm yesterday, the gas pollutant measurements conducted using the Portable Multigas Analyser with Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) technology did not detect any toxic gases in the atmosphere.

"Nevertheless, periodic air quality assessments will continue until the situation returns to normal," he said in a statement today.

Wan Latiff also said that the air quality monitoring station in the nearby area of Pandamaran, Klang, recorded an Air Pollutant Index (API) reading of 69 as of 8pm, indicating a moderate level and below the limit set by Malaysia Ambient Air Quality Standard.

Following the destruction of the raw material storage area on the premises, he said, the DoE had issued a directive for the cleanup and disposal of burnt chemical waste at licensed premises, while field assessments have found that the drains around the SK Meru area have been contaminated with green pigments.

He stressed that while the cleanup work was fully completed yesterday evening, monitoring of water flow from firefighting activities at the premises continued to ensure it was not channelled to drains outside the premises and did not affect water quality.

In the incident about 6.20am, the Fire and Rescue Department had said two paint processing plant at the Meru Industrial Park were destroyed. — Bernama