Malaysia

Putra Heights pipeline fire reveals risk, resilience in Petronas gas operations

Despite a projected RM60 million profit hit in FY2025, swift response and strategic planning underscore Petronas Gas’s operational maturity in the face of crisis

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 26 May 2025 2:52PM

Putra Heights pipeline fire reveals risk, resilience in Petronas gas operations
Profit earned includes both direct repair expenses and temporary revenue losses stemming from service disruption - May 26, 2025

THE recent pipeline fire near Putra Heights may serve as a costly reminder of the vulnerabilities embedded within critical infrastructure — but it also offers a striking case study in damage limitation and organisational agility.

Petronas Gas Bhd (PGB), the country’s leading natural gas transmission company, has disclosed an estimated profit impact of RM60 million for the financial year 2025, following the incident on 1 April. The figure includes both direct repair expenses and temporary revenue losses stemming from service disruption.

Of that sum, revenue loss is projected at a relatively modest RM20 million — a testament, perhaps, to PGB’s rapid operational response and effective coordination with authorities, gas shippers, and distributors to restore supply continuity.

“Revenue loss due to service interruption is projected to be minimal... owing to proactive collaboration between PGB, the authorities, gas shippers, and distributors in rapidly restoring pipeline services and stabilising supply,” the company said in a filing to Bursa Malaysia.

The more significant cost comes from infrastructure repair and restoration, currently estimated at RM170 million. However, this is not expected to weigh heavily on the group’s bottom line, with much of the cost likely to be capitalised and at least partially offset by insurance.

“A significant portion of this amount is expected to be capitalised under the company’s capital expenditure, with partial recovery anticipated through insurance claims,” PGB stated.

Still, the scale of the repair bill — nearly triple the projected profit impact — points to broader questions about resilience planning, asset integrity management, and systemic risk within the energy sector. For PGB, this event may well become a catalyst for even more rigorous oversight.

The company said it is maintaining close and transparent engagement with regulatory authorities as the investigation unfolds, while also establishing an independent task force to steer the recovery.

This body will oversee not only the post-incident review but also long-term infrastructure safety and strategic resilience planning.

PGB said the task force has been mandated to examine “the safety of gas transportation infrastructure, recovery and restoration activities, and other related matters.”

In a sector where incidents can quickly spiral into multi-year reputational and financial crises, PGB’s early containment and measured disclosures offer reassurance.

But the Putra Heights inferno is also a warning — that in high-stakes infrastructure, even rare events carry high costs, and preparedness is as much about systems thinking as engineering prowess. - May 26, 2025

Spotlight

Malaysia

Anwar congratulates Modi on becoming India's longest-serving elected PM

Malaysia

Missing jewellery: Rosmah ordered to pay RM67.5 million

People

Malay kampongs in Bangkok: Echoes of southern heritage in Thailand’s capital

Opinion

Johor MB’s exclusionary rhetoric betrays the people, exposes UMNO’s political hypocrisy

Malaysia

Johor and NS polls first major test of post PAS-Bersatu political order

Malaysia

Claimed installation of 12th N. Sembilan ruler invalid - Pengelola Bijaya Diraja

Malaysia

4WD driver who drove backwards on highway nabbed, positive for drugs (video)

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Seven in ten Malaysian workers earn RM5k or less - economist

You may be interested

Malaysia

Hannah Yeoh defends unity government model, says leadership is about cooperation, not exclusion

Malaysia

Economic strains from West Asia crisis must not fracture national unity, warns Fadillah

Malaysia

‘Be more cautious when issuing statements’ – Fahmi

Malaysia

AGC: Albert Tei’s complaint against Azam Baki classified as NFA

Malaysia

PAS-UMNO meeting a positive step in line with new political dynamics – Zahid

Malaysia

MACC - MOF deepen alliance to pursue high-profile graft cases and asset recovery

Malaysia

MACC personnel must declare assets within one month - MACC Chief

Malaysia

PAS not contesting solo in Johor PRN, new political alignment formed