MUMBAI: All vehicles on the Mumbai-Pune Expressway have been diverted to the old Mumbai-Pune Highway following a gas tanker overturn in the Khandala Ghat section. However, traffic continues to remain congested on the ghat on Wednesday.Traffic on the expressway was paralysed overnight after the tanker overturned, leaving hundreds of vehicles stranded and causing massive congestion on both carriageways.Vehicles remained stationary near the accident site for several hours amid traffic chaos that lasted over 12 hours, leaving passengers, including women and children, without food, water, and toilet facilities.The highway traffic police have appealed to motorists to avoid travelling on the expressway until normal traffic movement is restored.The Mumbai-Pune Expressway, India’s first 6-lane wide concrete, access-controlled tolled expressway, spans 94.5 km, connecting Mumbai, Raigad, Navi Mumbai, and Pune.According to the expressway control room, the gas tanker overturned on the highway around 5 pm on Tuesday.The incident occurred near the Adoshi tunnel in Raigad district when the tanker, allegedly travelling at high speed, lost control due to the slope and overturned. Soon after the accident, gas was found leaking from the tanker, causing panic among motorists, an official said.The tanker was carrying propylene gas, which is highly flammable. As a precaution, police immediately closed traffic towards Mumbai to prevent any untoward incident.Mumbai-bound traffic was diverted onto the Pune-bound carriageway for about a 2-km stretch. However, normal movement could not be restored due to a continuous gas leak from the tanker, resulting in long queues and crawling traffic even for Pune-bound motorists, an official at the expressway control room said.The impact was severe on motorists, with several passengers stranded for hours.“People have been stuck and desperately waiting for help. Please do something,” wrote X user VyasKarn.A conductor of the Maharashtra State Road Transport Corporation (MSRTC) bus told PTI around midnight that their vehicle had been stationary for over six hours near the accident site, leaving passengers without food, water, and toilet facilities.Many motorists voiced their frustration on social media, with some describing the expressway as a “parking lot” and advising others to avoid travel unless necessary.“Mumbai-Pune Expressway is a literal parking lot right now. Traffic crawling for hours near Lonavala and Khandala due to a truck overturn. If you absolutely don’t have to travel, don’t,” wrote X user pranav_72.Pune-bound motorists were also inconvenienced due to the traffic snarls.“Started my journey from Andheri West around 7 pm via cab. Will be reaching Pune around 3.40 am. Worst traffic experience I ever had,” another X user, Sohit Manik, wrote.The Maharashtra Highway Traffic Police have advised motorists to avoid the Mumbai–Pune Expressway until regular traffic movement is restored.The tanker overturned in the Khandala Ghat section on the Mumbai-bound corridor near the Adoshi tunnel, according to a statement from the highway traffic police shared by a spokesperson of the Maharashtra State Road Development Corporation (MSRDC).A highly flammable gas leaked from the tanker after the accident, and all agencies concerned were working at the site on a war footing to contain the situation, the statement said.The Mumbai-bound carriageway was closed in the interest of vehicle and commuter safety, leading to traffic congestion on both the Mumbai and Pune-bound lanes of the expressway, it added.(With agency Inputs)
