The Star Malaysia

Ecuador: Fuel spill in Galapagos under control

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QUITO: Ecuador officials have announced that a fuel spill in the Galapagos Islands, caused when a barge sank carrying 600 gallons of diesel fuel, is “under control”.

Authoritie­s had activated emergency protocols earlier on Sunday to contain the environmen­tal impact of the spill in the Galapagos archipelag­o, a Unesco World Heritage Site that is home to one of the most fragile ecosystems on the planet.

“The situation is under control and a series of actions have been deployed to mitigate the possible effects,” the presidenti­al communicat­ions office said in a statement yesterday, adding that the response operation had “controlled” the spill.

The accident, in which one person was injured, occurred in a port on San Cristobal Island, the easternmos­t island in the chain, when a crane collapsed while loading a container holding an electric generator onto a barge.

The falling container destabilis­ed the ship, which was carrying 600 gallons of diesel fuel, causing it to sink.

The generator and the loading crane were also submerged.

The Emergency Operations Committee took “immediate action to reduce the environmen­tal risk” in the so-called Enchanted Islands.

Personnel from the Galapagos National Park, the official nature reserve authority, and the Ecuadorian Navy set up spill containmen­t barriers and oil absorbent cloths around the fuel patch.

Galapagos minister Norman Wray told reporters that work was under way to recover the diesel.

He also said the generator, which was intended to supply energy on Isabela Island, and the barge would be replaced “as soon as possible”.

Isabela Island, the largest island, is currently facing energy rationing.

Wray assured reporters that food supply levels in the Galapagos would remain normal despite the loss of the barge.

The same barge, which is used to transport fuel and constructi­on materials to the Galapagos, had sunk previously in February 2018 due to a weight imbalance, in a port on the Guayas River.

The Galapagos Islands, located 1,000km east of mainland Ecuador, helped English naturalist Charles Darwin develop the theory of evolution.

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