Oil spill could devastate Orissa coast, says Greenpeace
September 24th, 2009 - 6:14 pm ICT by IANSBhubaneswar, Sep 24 (IANS) The Orissa coast faces devastation if the large amount of oil now inside a capsized ship off the Paradip port spills out of the wreck, international NGO Greenpeace said Thursday.
MV Black Rose, a Mongolian registered vessel, sank Sep 9 with 924 tonnes of furnace oil aboard. The port authorities have said 900 tonnes of the oil — in semi-solid state — is still inside the ship, but there have been small spills. Pollution control authorities have reported patches of oil on the coast three to four km away.
“As we move forward, the focus should not be solely on the response to the oil spill, but more importantly on preventing such accidents,” Sanjiv Gopal, the organisation’s oceans campaign manager said in a statement.
“The government must force the vessel owners to abide by the polluter pays principle, and hold them accountable for damages to the environment, for economic losses in the area, and for the expenses of the clean-up,” he said.
“Greenpeace is closely monitoring the effects of the spill, which is close to the Gahirmatha Marine Sanctuary, home to the endangered Olive Ridley turtles, and the Bitharkanika National Park, which harbours India’s second largest mangrove ecosystem and has the largest population of salt-water crocodiles in India,” he said.
The vessel ran aground near the harbour area of the port in the district of Jagatsinghpur, some 100 km from state capital Bhubaneswar. Apart from the 924 tonnes of furnace oil, it was carrying about 25,000 tonnes of iron ore fines.
Twenty seven crew members were on board. All but a Ukrainian engineer, whose body was found 10 days later, were rescued.
The Paradip Port Trust (PPT) has so far not been able to retrieve the oil and has contacted national and international firms for help in the clean-up.
Greenpeace said it respects the challenges the authorities face in minimising the impact of the spill.
“This is an urgent wake-up call on the larger issue of coastal development. The short coastline of Orissa (480 km) could see the development of over 10 ports in the next decade. Accidents of this kind across 10 ports would devastate Orissa’s fragile coastal and marine environment, and the thousands of fishermen dependent on it,” said Gopal.
“Oil can have subtle and long-lasting negative effect, like seriously impacting fish stocks. Oil can also bio-accumulate up through the food chain as predators (including humans) eat fish that have sub-lethal amounts of oil in their bodies,” he said.
- Oil spill on Orissa coast could be from sunken ship: expert - Sep 22, 2009
- Mongolian ship causing no ecological damage - Sep 22, 2009
- Bids invited to remove oil from ship sunk off Orissa coast - Sep 24, 2009
- Microbes used to clean Orissa oil spill - Oct 09, 2009
- Orissa directed to monitor oil spill off Paradip port - Oct 07, 2009
- Fresh oil from sunken ship blackening Orissa coastline: experts (With Images) - Oct 06, 2009
- US firm to remove oil from sunken Mongolian ship (Lead) - Oct 09, 2009
- Orissa forms crisis group to monitor oil spill off Paradip - Oct 08, 2009
- Central team reaches Paradip to inspect capsized ship - Sep 26, 2009
- Andhra-based company to plug holes of sunken ship - Sep 27, 2009
- Mumbai oil spill decreasing, say officials (Lead) - Aug 08, 2011
- Bad weather prevents oil-plugging on sunken ship - Sep 30, 2009
- Wildlife body concerned over delay in oil removal - Sep 23, 2009
- Expert team to verify fresh spillage from sunken ship - Oct 05, 2009
- Greenpeace opposes ports near turtle nesting sites - Apr 15, 2010
Tags: control authorities, economic losses, furnace oil, gopal, greenpeace, international ngo, iron ore fines, largest population, mangrove ecosystem, marine sanctuary, oil spill, olive ridley turtles, orissa coast, paradip port trust, polluter pays principle, pollution control, port authorities, salt water crocodiles, sanjiv, vessel owners