Sonowal condoles Kolkata warehouse collapse on SMPA land
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Ports and Shipping Minister Sarbananda Sonowal on Wednesday, 24 June 2026 expressed deep anguish over the collapse of an under-construction private warehouse in Kolkata, situated on land leased by the Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port Authority (SMPA), and confirmed that rescue operations are under way with full central support to the state government.
Context
The structure that gave way was a private warehouse being built on port-leased land under the jurisdiction of SMPA, the major central-government port formerly known as Kolkata Port Trust. Sonowal stated he was 'deeply anguished' by the incident and offered 'heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims,' while praying for 'the speedy recovery of those injured.' The minister did not specify casualty numbers in his post.
Rescue operations were described as 'currently in full swing,' with SMPA senior officials and all relevant agencies reported to be present on the ground at the time of the minister's statement.
Policy Backdrop
Major ports in India, including SMPA, operate under the Major Port Trusts Act, 1963, which empowers port authorities to lease land to private parties for ancillary commercial activities such as warehousing. This arrangement creates a shared layer of responsibility for on-site safety between the port authority — which falls under the Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways (MoPSW) — and the state government in whose jurisdiction the port is located.
West Bengal state agencies and central port authorities must therefore coordinate in both rescue operations and any subsequent inquiry into structural causes. Past incidents on port-leased land have prompted reviews of leasing norms and construction safety standards.
Stakeholders and Impact
The most immediate stakeholders are the victims, their families, and the injured workers — believed to include construction labourers employed at the under-construction site. Port workers in the surrounding area of the SMPA estate are also among those potentially affected by the incident and the ongoing rescue cordon.
The West Bengal state government's disaster and relief agencies are working in coordination with SMPA, which Sonowal said is 'actively providing necessary support.' The MoPSW, through SMPA, has committed to extending 'all support to the state govt and its agencies in the rescue effort.'
What's Next
Once rescue operations conclude, attention is expected to shift to a joint technical inquiry into the structural causes of the collapse. Such inquiries typically examine construction quality, adherence to approved plans, and whether the port authority's leasing and oversight protocols were followed.
The incident could also prompt the MoPSW to revisit safety guidelines governing construction activity on land leased by major ports — a review pattern seen after similar structural failures on port estates in the past. Any policy response would have implications for private lessees operating across India's 13 major ports.