International —
Oil is harmful to the environment every step of the way. It leaks from pipelines, spills from ships, creates smog in our cities, and is heating up our planet. Marine ecosystems already stressed by over fishing and destructive fishing practices, toxic pollution and climate change are now taking big hits from recent large oil spills.
It
also has to be said that while these recent dramatic spills are making
the headlines, oil spills actually occur every day. Every year
millions of gallons of oil enters the ocean from routine ship and car
maintenance, off shore oil drilling operations and ship spills.
Effects of an oil spill
While
the size of a spill is obviously important, the amount of damage done
can depend even more on other factors like the type of oil spilled and
the location of the spill - as well as temperature, wind and weather.
Oil
can have a smothering effect on marine life, fouling feathers and fur.
It is a toxic poison that birds and mammals often ingest while trying
to clean themselves. Fish absorb it through direct contact and through
their gills. The fumes and contact with oil can also cause nausea
and health problems for people in affected areas.
Even when
the oil does not kill, it can have more subtle and long lasting
negative effects. For example, it can damage fish eggs, larva and
young - wiping out generations. It also can bio-accumulate up
through the food chain as predators (including humans) eat numbers of
fish (or other wildlife) that have sub-lethal amounts of oil stored in
their bodies.
A
rapid and well-resourced response to an oil spill is vitally
important. However, it must be acknowledged that a real
'clean-up' in the sense of recovering all the oil and getting the
beaches back to normal, is not possible.
Normally to
prevent oil from spreading over sea surface they use booms (to contain
the oil in polluted areas), and then use skimmers to suck up the oil
and pump into a receiving tank. But the response to oil spills is
an extremely difficult and sometimes despairing task.
Booms
only work when the waves are small. Even in ideal conditions, with all
the equipment and all the experts deployed immediately, recovery of
more than 20 percent of the original oil spilled is never
practical. Most of it either gets to the shore, or is
incorporated into sediments and the seabed, or evaporates.
Once
the oil hits the shore, various types of mechanical removal are
needed. But some techniques cause damage themselves and, for some
very sensitive areas, vigorous clean up techniques can cause more
damage than the oil itself. Major oil spills since 1960 (map courtesy of Lastingnews.com)
Sorry,
this page uses an Iframe, which your browser doesn't support. You
can click here
to see the map without its frame.
Long term clean
up and support for affected communities is often complicated by a lack
of accountability. Often, financial responsibility is limited to
the ship owner, while the large multinational oil companies that own
the cargo escape responsibility.
However, at least in the
case of routine accidents, the oil companies have international regimes
that can be called upon to provide financial resources to help, but
this is not the case for spills caused by war where often access is
difficult due to political problems or the presence of munitions and
any financial help is left to donations from governments and non-profit
organizations and whatever the UN and others can scrape together.
Recent spills:
Indian Ocean
Source:
On 15 August, about 470 km (290 miles) from the coast of India, the
Japanese operated Bright Artemis oil tanker collided with a smaller
cargo ship it was attempting to assist.
Amount and type: About 5.3 million litres (1.4 million gallons) of crude oil.
Area affected:
The spill occurred hundreds of kilometres from land, so substantial
impacts on inshore and coastal environments are unlikely.
The
effects of 'at sea' spills are less understood than the more obvious
effects seen when an oil spill washes up on shore, but could include
oiling of offshore seabirds, impacts on marine mammals and turtles and
toxicity to organisms occupying surface water layers, including the
eggs and larvae of many fish species.
Situation summary: A serious incident, but largely overshadowed by the disastrous spills in the Philippines and Lebanon.
Source: Solar I, an oil tanker chartered by Petron Corp., the largest oil refiner in the Philippines, sank in rough seas.
Amount
and type: About 200,000 litres (53,000 gallons) of bunker oil in
the initial spill. The tanker is sunk in deep water, making
recovery unlikely and the ship an ecological time bomb with an
additional 1.8 million litres (475,000 gallons) of bunker fuel on
board.
Area affected:
Roughly 320 km (200 miles) of coast line is covered in thick
sludge. Miles of coral reef have been destroyed and 1,000
hectares (2,470 acres) of marine reserve badly damaged.
Situation summary:
The Philippines' worst oil spill. The government has asked for
international assistance to clean up the spill. However,
long-term and possible irreversible damage to the environment and
livelihoods of people is likely.
As Joseph Gajo, a local marine
reserve caretaker, is quoted as saying, "My fear is all the mangrove
trees will die. If the mangroves and coral die, this will affect
fishermen." According to Guimaras Governor Joaquin Nava,
25,000 people are already affected or displaced.
Our ship, the
Esperanza, is in the area. We will assist the Philippines Coast
Guard in a visual survey and impacts assessment, as well as transport
clean-up containment equipment and relief goods donated by the ABS-CBN
Foundation and friends of Greenpeace.
Lebanon
Images from the Jieh oil spill in Lebanon
Source:
On 13 and 15 July 2006, Jieh coastal power station, 28km south of
Beirut was bombed by the Israeli navy. Possibly also oil leaked
from an Israeli war frigate hit by a missile.
Amount and type:
Between 11 million and 40 million litres (3 - 10.5 million gallons;
10,000 - 15,000 tonnes) of heavy fuel oil has leaked into the sea.
Area affected:
Due to winds blowing from the South West to North East and water
current movement, the oil spill was partly carried out to sea and
partly dispersed along the coast. The pollution is estimated to extend
at least 150km (90 miles) off shore, and the oil has hit a 150km
stretch of coastline extending even into Syria.
What is and should be done:
Oil needs to be recovered from impacted beaches and from the sea's
surface. There are reports and satellite images that show there
is some oil offshore, but because aerial surveillance is not currently
possible, the amount and extent are not fully known.
In
order to get a complete assessment of the extent of the spill, as well
as getting equipment and experts to the scene the air, land and sea
blockade needs to be lifted. Oil recovery with safe and secure
storage facilities are needed which will help to mitigate the
impacts. A full environmental damage assessment programme needs
to be implemented.
Greenpeace environmental impact assessment
teams in both Israel and Lebanon are helping gather information needed
to deal with the environmental cost of the war, including this
spill.
A
toxic carpet of heavy fuel oil up to 10 cm thick is suffocating sea off
the Lebanese coast. An estimated 10,000 to 15,000 tonnes of Fuel Oil
poured into the Mediterranean Sea following the bombing of the Jieh
power plant on July 13 and 15. This has contaminated up to 150 km of
the Lebanese coast north of the plant; however the full extent of the
spill has yet to be fully assessed as aerial surveillance is still not
possible due to an air and sea blockade.
Situation summary:
This is a significant spill and will have lasting impacts. Heavy fuel
oil is persistent in the environment and a significantly large amount
of it has washed up onto shore. Containment and clean up was
initially impossible because of the war. These factors make this
a particularly nightmarish spill.
Initial coastal clean
up could take 6 to 12 months. The tourism and fishing
industries are particularly hard hit, and one UN spokesperson has been
reported as saying the damage could last "up to a century".
How you can help
Efficiency and renewable energy can help us reduce our dependence on oil - the only real way to stop oil spills. Click here for tips on reducing your own energy use.
Marine
reserves strengthen ocean ecosystems - making them better able to
withstand and recover from environmental disasters. Sign up as an Ocean Defender to help create a network of protected areas covering 40 percent of the world's oceans.