Ship leaks oil after being hit by barge
April 13th, 2010 - 5:31 pm ICT by IANSBhubaneswar, April 13 (IANS) An Indian ship leaked about seven to eight tonnes of fuel oil after it was hit by a barge nearly two km off Orissa’s coast near Gopalpur port due to bad weather, a port official said Tuesday.
The non-coking coal laden ship sailing from Indonesia had anchored nearly two km away from the port at Gopalpur in the district of Ganjam, about 170 km from here.
“The barge engaged in cargo operation went out of control due to rough sea conditions and hit the ship,” P.K. Mohapatra, executive director of the Gopalpur port told IANS, adding that the accident took place Monday evening.
“There was a leakage of about seven to eight tonnes of fuel oil from the ship. But the leakage was spotted and contained within half an hour,” he said.
The port authorities have engaged at least 400 workers and officials to remove the oil from the water and coast.
Local television footage showed heavy oil floating near the Rushikulya beach and some of it has washed ashore on the sand.
Biswajit Mohanty, secretary of the Wildlife Society of Orissa, said oil has to be recovered and collected from the place so that there is no adverse effect on turtle eggs or the marine fauna.
“More than 100,000 sea turtles had nested last month on the beach. The oil could cause irreversible damage to the eggs and the sea turtle population which are still present at the offshore waters,” he told IANS.
“Marine fauna which are food for the turtles will be severely affected. Oil can be ingested by the turtles which are present now in the offshore waters leading to their death. Dolphins can also be impacted by the oil spill,” he said.
District collector V.K. Pandian said officials have been sent to assess the damage the oil has caused to marine creatures and the environment.
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- 50,000 endangered turtles nest in Odisha's Rushikulya beach - Mar 01, 2012
- Oil poisoning? Alarming sea animal deaths on India's west coast (With Images) - Apr 07, 2012
- Efforts on to combat oil spill hazards off Mumbai - Aug 10, 2010
- Orissa bans fishing near turtle nesting sites - Nov 01, 2010
- As rare Olive Ridleys mate, Orissa mounts vigil - Dec 21, 2010
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- Mumbai beaches face oil spill, people asked to stay off (Lead) - Aug 07, 2011
Tags: bad weather, coking coal, ganjam, heavy oil, indian ship, irreversible damage, marine creatures, marine fauna, offshore waters, oil spill, pandian, port authorities, rough sea conditions, sea turtle, sea turtle population, sea turtles, ship sailing, television footage, turtle eggs, wildlife society