Business Standard

Oil spill threatens Asia’s richest fisheries

- STEVEN LEE MYERS & JAVIER C. HERNÁNDEZ

A fiery collision that sank an Iranian tanker in the East China Sea a month ago has resulted in an environmen­tal threat that experts say is unlike any before: An almost invisible type of petroleum has begun to contaminat­e some of the most important fishing grounds in Asia, from China to Japan and beyond.

It is the largest oil spill in decades, but the disaster has unfolded outside the glare of internatio­nal attention that big spills have previously attracted. That is because of its remote location on the high seas and also the type of petroleum involved: condensate, a toxic, liquid byproduct of natural gas production.

Unlike the crude oil in better-known disasters like the Exxon Valdez and the Deepwater Horizon, condensate does not clump into black globules that can be easily spotted or produce heartwrenc­hing images of animals mired in muck. There’s no visible slick that can be pumped out. Experts said the only real solution is to let it evaporate or dissolve. Absorbed into the water, it will remain toxic for a time, though it will also disperse more quickly into the ocean than crude oil.

Experts say there has never been so large a spill of condensate; up to 111,000 metric tons has poured into the ocean. It has almost certainly already invaded an ecosystem that includes some of the world’s most bountiful fisheries off Zhoushan, the archipelag­o that rises where the Yangtze River flows into the East China Sea.

The area produced five million tons of seafood of up to four dozen species for China alone last year, according to Greenpeace, including crab, squid, yellow croaker, mackerel and a local favorite, hairtail. If projection­s are correct, the toxins could soon make their way into equally abun-- dant Japanese fisheries.

Exposure to condensate is extremely unhealthy to human sand potentiall­y fatal. The effects of eating fish contaminat­ed with it remain essentiall­y untested, but experts strongly advise against doing so .“This is an oils pill of a type we haven’ t seen before ,” said Paul Johnston, a scientist at Greenpeace Research Laboratori­es at the University of Exeter in England .“Working out the impact is actually a huge task—probably next to impossible .”

For China, the disaster has become ates to fits ambition s as a global and regional steward of these as, especially at a time when it is reinforcin­g its territoria­l claims, including disputed territorie­s with Japan in these waters. Given its proximity, China has taken the lead in investigat­ing the disaster and monitoring the spill, but it has faced some criticism for what some see as as low and inadequate response.

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