The Scotsman

Environmen­tal disaster feared off Sri Lanka

- By BHARATHAMA­LLAWARACHI

A fire-stricken container ship carrying chemicals has started to sink off Sri Lanka's main port, raising fears of a marine environmen­tal disaster.

A fire-stricken container ship carrying chemicals has started to sink off Sri Lanka's main port, raising fears of a marine environmen­tal disaster.

X-press Feeders, operators of the container ship MV X-press Pearl, said salvage experts were able to board the vessel and attach a tow line, but "efforts to move the ship to deeper waters have failed".

"The ship's aft portion is now touching bottom at a depth of 21 metres (70 feet)," while the forward area remains afloat with smoke coming out of two cargo holds, the company said in a statement.

Navy spokespers­on Indika de Silva said the ship could cause severe pollution if it sinks at its current location off the port of Colombo.

"The ship is sinking. Salvers are trying to tow the ship to deep sea before it sinks to minimise the marine pollution but the rear area of the ship has drifted," Captain Silva said.

The fire erupted on May 20 when the ship was anchored about 9.5 nautical miles north west of Colombo and waiting to enter the port.

The navy believes the blaze was caused by the chemicals being transporte­d on the Singapore-flagged vessel. It was carrying 1,486 containers, including 25 tonnes of nitric acid and other chemicals that were loaded at the port of Hazira, India, on May 15.

The blaze has destroyed most of the ship's cargo. Some containers tumbled into the sea, polluting surroundin­g waters and a long stretch of the island nation's famed beaches.

There are fears that hundreds of tonnes of oil from the vessel's fuel tanks could also leak into the sea if it sinks, devastatin­g nearby marine life.

Environmen­talist Ajantha Perera said the incident could cause "a terrible environmen­tal disaster".

She said the ship is believed to have been carrying 81 containers of hazardous goods and about 400 containers containing oil.

"All these would mix with the sea water and would destroy the marine environmen­t and would have an adverse impact on the fishing industry," she said.

As a precaution­ary measure, the authoritie­s reimposed a fishing ban along about 50 miles of the coast.

Charitha Pattiaratc­hi, a professor of oceanograp­hy at the University of Western Australia, said the ship was carrying 78 tonnes of plastic pallets called nurdles, a raw material used to make plastic bags.

Writing on his Facebook page, he said the incident had released "potentiall­y close to 3 billion nurdles" into the ocean that are washing up on beaches.

He said the nurdles "will persist in the marine environmen­t forever as they are not biodegrada­ble".

Sri Lankan police are probing the fire, and a court in Colombo on Tuesday banned the captain, the engineer and the assistant engineer from leaving the country. The government has said it will take legal action against the owners of the ship to claim compensati­on.

The vessel's 25-member crew was evacuated last week after an explosion. They include Philippine, Chinese, Indian and Russian nationals.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 0 The sinking MV X-press Pearl at Kapungoda where it is anchored off Colombo port, Sri Lanka. Salvage experts were attempting to tow the fire-stricken container ship
0 The sinking MV X-press Pearl at Kapungoda where it is anchored off Colombo port, Sri Lanka. Salvage experts were attempting to tow the fire-stricken container ship
 ??  ?? 0 Oil floats near the beach of Sarakkuwa, just north of Sri Lanka’s capital Colombo
0 Oil floats near the beach of Sarakkuwa, just north of Sri Lanka’s capital Colombo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom