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Warning Issued Over Illegal LPG Refilling of Household Cylinders

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Pictures courtesy of Matichon 

 

Authorities and energy experts have warned the public against refilling household cooking gas cylinders with LPG at service stations, citing serious safety risks and legal penalties. The alert comes after reports from Ubon Ratchathani and Roi Et provinces revealed a growing trend of residents carrying domestic gas cylinders to LPG stations due to rising household gas prices.

 

Siriset Phatrakittirat, an LPG business operator in Ubon Ratchathani, said on October 17 that stricter enforcement from the Department of Energy Business is urgently needed. He noted that many low-income earners, struggling with increased cooking gas prices, have resorted to refilling cylinders at petrol stations rather than purchasing full tanks from authorised gas retailers. While cheaper, this practice is both illegal and dangerous.

 

Siriset explained that household LPG cylinders are not designed for direct refilling at gas pumps and many may be old, damaged, or poorly maintained. Refilling them at high-pressure stations poses a serious explosion risk, endangering both users and others nearby. “People should only refill their cylinders through licensed gas distributors to ensure safety,” he warned.

 

Under the law, the practice violates the Fuel Oil Control Act B.E. 2542 (1999), which prohibits the filling of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) into domestic cooking gas cylinders within service stations. Stations are required to display signs warning against such refilling. Offenders face up to one year in prison, a fine of up to 100,000 baht, or both, under Section 66 of the Act.

 

Siriset also urged the Department of Energy Business to tighten inspections and take swift action against petrol stations that allow illegal refilling. He stressed that enforcement must be consistent to prevent incidents and maintain public safety, especially as economic pressures push more people toward unsafe practices.

 

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Key Takeaways

 

• Residents in Ubon Ratchathani and Roi Et have begun refilling household gas cylinders at LPG stations due to price increases.

• Experts warn the practice is illegal and poses high risks of explosion and injury.

• Violators face up to one year in jail, a 100,000-baht fine, or both under the Fuel Oil Control Act.

 

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image.png  Adapted by Asean Now from Matichon 2025-10-19

 

 

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5 minutes ago, Georgealbert said:

Authorities and energy experts have warned the public against refilling household cooking gas cylinders with LPG at service stations

Shouldn't the business owners of the service stations not allow these unsafe acts? 

 

Won't be good for business having a cylinder explode. It's easy to shut down the pump remotely if the station attendant sees people filling gas cylinders. 

 

Years ago, I remember buying a new gas cylinder for the house, the Mrs called the gas guys to fill, they changed it out for a 15 year old cylinder, geeze, I wasn't happy 😡

 

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