A series of deadly incidents and rising emergency call data are driving a global push for stricter fire safety enforcement, with authorities from Bangkok to Bournemouth deploying new legal powers and inspection regimes to address long-standing compliance failures.
Bangkok Pub Fire Investigation Reveals Multiple Exit Violations
Bangkok police launched an investigation on July 13, 2026, after a fire at the Rong Beer Na Ladprao pub in the Chatuchak district killed at least 27 people and injured 71 others. Survivors described a confusing maze-like layout inside the venue, with smoke first appearing behind the musical equipment before an explosion tore through the building.
Investigators are focusing on critical exit failures. Preliminary findings suggest a rear exit near the restrooms may have been locked, while a handle was missing from a kitchen exit. The Bangkok governor also confirmed that an adjacent passageway was partially obstructed. The establishment, which held a licence for food and alcohol sales, has been ordered to close for 30 days while the probe continues.
Locked exits and obstructed escape routes are a deadly combination, as the Bangkok tragedy underscores. For UK businesses, fire safety law demands thorough planning — not just to pass inspections, but to protect everyone on your premises. The free Fire Safety Toolkit walks you through risk assessments, evacuation plans, and fire drill documentation that match current UK requirements, helping you spot hazards before they turn into disasters. Download the free Fire Safety Toolkit
Indian Authorities Target Coaching Centres Amid Rising Fire Risks
In India, municipal and state bodies are ramping up enforcement after a surge in fire-related emergencies. On July 13, 2026, the Nagpur Municipal Corporation flagged 78 additional coaching centres for failing to maintain adequate firefighting equipment and emergency exits, bringing the total number of recently inspected facilities to 137. Officials warned that non-compliant centres could face disconnection of utility services under the Maharashtra Fire Prevention Act.
Data from Telangana Fire Services paints a stark picture of the growing threat. Emergency calls jumped 42% between January 1 and July 12, 2026, compared with the same period last year, with nearly 9,000 calls received. While fatalities in the state dropped significantly, property losses soared to more than Rs 406 crore. Electrical short circuits and general carelessness were identified as the primary causes.
However, administrative delays are hampering efforts in some regions. In Delhi, the fire service has yet to empanel third-party auditors nearly a month after the government notified new safety audit rules, leaving the city without a formal database of accredited professionals to conduct mandatory inspections.
UK Councils Use Building Safety Act Powers to Enforce Repairs
In the United Kingdom, local authorities are beginning to wield new powers under the Building Safety Act 2022 to compel structural repairs. The Bournemouth, Poole, and Christchurch (BCP) Council successfully obtained a remediation order for the Oyster Bay development, addressing generic defects including inadequate fire compartmentation. The case was settled on April 10, 2026, through a consent order and an agreed works schedule.
Industry data suggests a mixed picture for workplace safety more broadly. Fire safety breaches on construction sites dropped to 361 in the 2024/25 period, down from 536 the previous year. However, experts caution that Health and Safety Executive (HSE) inspections have declined significantly over the past decade due to funding constraints and a shrinking pool of qualified inspectors.
With HSE inspections on the decline, the onus is on employers to manage their own compliance proactively. The free Health & Safety Toolkit gives you ready-to-use risk assessments, checklists, and documentation covering everything from COSHH to PPE and first aid — helping you meet your duties under the Health & Safety at Work Act without costly external audits. Already trusted by over 37,000 UK businesses, it is designed to keep your workforce and visitors protected every day. Get the free Health & Safety Toolkit
Corporate Liability and Technical Standards Under Scrutiny
Recent enforcement actions have also highlighted the risks posed by faulty equipment and weak logistics oversight. Amazon India is investigating a fatal fire that occurred on June 5 at a warehouse operated by a logistics partner in Uttarakhand. The facility reportedly lacked fire safety clearances, smoke detectors, and emergency exits at the time of the incident.
In a separate consumer protection case, the Himachal Pradesh consumer commission awarded a resident Rs 30,000 in compensation on June 27, 2026, after a solar power unit caught fire twice. The commission found that the provider had installed an undersized inverter that did not match the purchased system.
On the regulatory front, the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy in India has extended the self-certification deadline for large-scale solar inverters to December 31, 2026. Meanwhile, the Central Electricity Authority is seeking stakeholder feedback by July 28, 2026, on a new safety audit framework for Battery Energy Storage Systems, which would require external audits every two years by highly qualified professionals.









