China factory explosion kills two, injures 66
World
By
Xinhua
| Jan 18, 2026
An explosion at a steel factory in northern China killed two people and injured 66 on Sunday, with five more still missing, state media said.
The blast occurred at around 3 pm (0700 GMT) at a Baogang United Steel plate plant in Baotou city in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, state news agency Xinhua reported.
"As of 5:30 pm on Sunday, local emergency management and fire rescue authorities reported two fatalities and five people missing," Xinhua said.
"Sixty-six individuals have been sent to hospitals for treatment, three of whom are in severe condition."
Footage on social media showed collapsed ceilings and rubble at the factory, huge plumes of smoke overhead and fire engines at the scene.
READ MORE
KPRL: The trump card for Kenya Pipeline in post-stake sale era
AfDB Backs Kenya's geothermal expansion with Sh2.6b loan
Public officers' vehicle financing scheme crucial for service delivery
Long-stay cargo at Mombasa Port to be moved to ease congestion
State reforms accreditation system to boost trade, market access
Safaricom partial divestiture: Endless scrutiny or bold infrastructure growth?
New bid to double Kenya-UK trade to Sh680b
Why blended finance is gaining traction in Kenya's search for sustainable funding
'We are coming for you,' Why KRA has suspended nil tax filings
EAC launches first regional framework to strengthen pandemic preparedness
Other videos showed an object being blasted into the sky as smoke billowed from the factory and a large, cylindrical hunk of metal that appeared to have come from the plant lying among the rubble of buildings.
Residents kilometres away reported that the explosion shook their homes and shattered windows.
The cause of the incident is being investigated, Xinhua said, while the rescue operation continues.
Industrial accidents are common in China due to lax safety standards.
An explosion at a fireworks factory in Hunan province in central China in June killed nine people and injured 26 others.
In 2015, blasts at warehouses containing flammable chemicals in the port city of Tianjin killed more than 170 people and injured 700 others.