IANS | 17 May, 2024
                  Up to 2,000 gallons of oil may have spilt into the Gulf of Mexico 
after a bunker barge struck a bridge in the island city of Galveston, 
eastern Texas, the US Coast Guard estimated.
  The source of the 
leakage from the barge has been contained after the accident, said the 
US Coast Guard, reports Xinhua news agency.
  The Coast Guard said 
it deployed planes and drones to evaluate the extent of the oil spill on
 Thursday while closing about 6.5 miles (10.5 km) along the Gulf 
Intracoastal Waterway, a busy shipping channel for the region. Galveston
 is about 50 miles (80.5 km) away from downtown Houston, the largest 
city in Texas.
  "We're pretty confident there was much less oil 
introduced to the water than we initially estimated," Coast Guard 
Captain Keith Donohue told a news conference.
  "We've recovered 
over 605 gallons of oily water mixture from the environment, as well as 
an additional 5,640 gallons of oil product from the top of the barge 
that did not go into the water," Donohue said.
  The 321-foot barge,
 which has the capacity to hold 30,000 barrels of oil, was carrying 
23,000 barrels, which amounts to nearly 9,66,000 gallons, when it 
slammed into a pillar of the Pelican Island Causeway bridge on 
Wednesday, Rick Freed, vice president of barge operator Martin Marine, 
told the news conference.
  A tugboat lost control of two barges 
"due to a break in the coupling" connecting them. One of the barges 
slammed into the bridge, the Coast Guard said.
  Freed said an investigation is still underway.
  The
 crash led to the partial collapse of the bridge, forcing the only land 
connection from Galveston to Pelican Island to shut down. No injuries 
were reported.
  "The harmful consequences of oil are once again 
impacting our coastal communities, wildlife, and waters," Joseph Gordon 
with an ocean conservation group named Oceana said in a statement.
  The
 spill will probably have minimal long-term consequences, considering 
the volume of oil on board the barge, Danny Reible, a Texas Tech 
University professor, told ABC News on Thursday.
  The accident came
 weeks after a cargo ship slammed into a support column of the Francis 
Key Bridge in Baltimore on March 26, claiming six lives.