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SL probes possible oil leak from burnt cargo ship
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IANS | 11 Jun, 2021
Sri Lankan authorities have taken steps to investigate a possible oil
leak from the sinking X-Press Pearl ship that caught fire on May 20
while anchoring 9.5 nautical miles off the Colombo harbour, local media
reported Friday.
Suspicions of a leak were raised after
international media showed satellite images of a suspected oil patch
around the ship, reports Xinhua news agency.
SMinister of
Environment Mahinda Amaraweera told the local media that the Chairperson
of the Marine Environment Protection Authority (MEPA) informed him that
a team from the MEPA has been sent to the ship to investigate and
obtain the relevant oil and water samples.
The X-Press Feeders,
operators of the container ship X-Press Pearl, on Thursday confirmed
that the situation on the scene remains under observation with no signs
of debris and no confirmed reports of fuel oil pollution.
State
Minister of Urban Development, Coast Conservation, Waste Disposal and
public Sanitation Nalaka Godahewa said that both the Sri Lankan Navy and
Indian Coast Guards who had anchored near the ship confirmed that the
media reports of an oil spill were incorrect but authorities have
dispatched experts to the scene to verify it.
The X-Press Pearl,
registered under the flag of Singapore and carrying 1,486 containers
with 25 tonnes of nitric acid and several other chemicals and cosmetics,
departed from the port of Hazira, India on May 15.
The vessel
sent out a distress call while being close to the Colombo Port on May
20, and soon caught fire. The Sri Lankan Navy then dispatched vessels to
bring the fire under control.
The MEPA said that the burning of
the X-Press Pearl vessel has caused a massive environmental disaster as
beaches along the southern and western coast have been damaged due to
the debris being washed ashore.
The government said a large
number of marine life have been killed as a result of the pollution
caused by the fire while the Fisheries Department has imposed a
temporary ban on fishing from the southern coast to the western coast.
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