Tunnel fire under control as major incident declared

Antonia Matthews
BBC News
Dark plumes of smoke billowed from the tunnel

A fire in a tunnel which was declared a major incident by emergency services has been brought under control.

Crews attended the scene on Thursday afternoon after a vehicle caught fire in the Conwy Tunnel on the A55, North Wales Fire and Rescue Service said.

There were no fatalities, the fire service said, and it urged people living nearby to keep windows and doors closed as a precaution due to smoke in the area.

The tunnel will remain closed in both directions for some time due to the scale of the incident and the need for ongoing safety assessments, it added.

"Detailed inspections will need to be carried out to determine the extent of any damage before the tunnel can be safely reopened," the fire service said.

About 40,000 vehicles a day on average pass through the tunnel.

Diversions are in place and the roads in and around the Colwyn Bay, Conwy, Llanrwst and Betws-y-Coed areas are extremely busy, it added, including nearby villages.

Arriva Buses Wales said all five of its services would be terminating at Dwygyfylchi, Conwy, until further notice, adding it could not serve Deganwy, Conwy or Llandudno.

Eira D'Arcy Crane lorry with Terex Kendley company names on the white folded crane seen in the tunnel from the back with grey smoke coming from it and wing mirror of car behind is visible Eira D'Arcy
A crane lorry was stationary in one lane as clouds of smoke rose towards the exit of the tunnel

Eira D'Arcy, 73, was travelling to a caravan park near Llanfwrog on Anglesey with her husband when they found themselves behind the vehicle involved.

"We had entered the tunnel in the nearside lane when the traffic abruptly stopped in our lane," she said.

"I noticed about four cars ahead that a lorry was stationary and had small flames underneath it.

Sam Tibbatts Smoke seen rising from tunnel seen from bridge above and cars stuck in queueSam Tibbatts
Smoke billowed from the tunnel following the incident

"We could see heavy white smoke and needed to drive through it and we were concerned in case something exploded, so we needed to get out as soon as possible."

She said someone who appeared to be the driver was on the nearside, away from his vehicle, coming towards them on his phone to what she presumed were the emergency services.

No other vehicle was involved or stopped, she said.

"We managed to pass and it was a relief to be safely out of the tunnel."

Traffic Wales Dual carriageway with heavy traffic in one direction Traffic Wales
Traffic cameras showed delays back to the Colwyn Bay junction