CBC Edition

Cargo ship hit by Houthis sinks, spilling oil and fertilizer into Red Sea

- Kevin Maimann

Food, drinking water and marine life are at risk after a cargo ship attacked by Yemen's Houthi rebels spilled oil and fertilizer into the Red Sea.

The U.S. military's Central Command, which oversees the Middle East, said early Sunday the Rubymar, a Be‐ lize-flagged vessel carrying 21,000 metric tons of ammo‐ nium phosphate sulfate fer‐ tilizer, sank at 2:15 a.m. local time Saturday.

The ship was struck by a Houthi anti-ship ballistic mis‐ sile on Feb. 18 in the Bab elMandeb Strait, a waterway linking the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, and had been drifting northward after tak‐ ing on water. Before plung‐ ing, the vessel had already been leaking heavy fuel that triggered an oil slick through the waterway.

"It's really devastatin­g," said David Rehkopf, associate professor of epidemiolo­gy and public health at Stanford University in California.

Rehkopf co-authored a study about a potential Red Sea oil spill in 2021, when the

FSO Safer oil tanker carrying millions of barrels of oil was decaying and in danger of spilling. Researcher­s found a spill would have "cata‐ strophic" public health rami‐ fications for residents in Yemen, Saudi Arabia and Er‐ itrea.

Rehkopf is concerned about potential harm to mar‐ ine life, which many residents rely on for food, as well as drinking water, given Saudi Arabia relies on desalinati­on plants that filter sea water.

WATCH | How the Houthis rose to promi‐ nence:

Spill could have 'implica‐ tions for the health of mil‐ lions'

"Worst-case scenario is that there could be implica‐ tions for the health of mil‐ lions of people from pollu‐ tion, and food supply and water supply effects," Rehkopf said.

"This would be bad any‐ where. I mean, if this occur‐ red off the coast of Florida, it would be bad. But it's expo‐ nentially worse because of the difficulti­es that are al‐ ready going on for folks there."

The Rubymar could leak 7,000 barrels, which is only a fraction of the oil carried by the Safer until its cargo was successful­ly transferre­d to another vessel last year. But that is still significan­tly more oil than was spilled by the

Wakashio, a Japanese ship that wrecked near Mauritius in 2020, causing millions of dollars in damages and harming the livelihood of thousands of fishermen.

Ahmed Awad Bin Mubarak, the prime minister of Yemen's internatio­nally recognized government, called the Rubymar's sinking "an unpreceden­ted environ‐ mental disaster."

"It's a new disaster for our country and our people," he wrote on X, formerly Twitter. "Every day, we pay for the Houthi militia's adventures, which were not stopped at plunging Yemen into the coup disaster and war."

U.S. Central Command has warned in recent days of an "environmen­tal disaster" in the making.

Fish could become 'ined‐ ible,' researcher says

The Houthi rebels have re‐ peatedly targeted ships in the Red Sea, a critical water‐ way for energy shipments heading to Europe, since No‐ vember in protest of Israel's attacks on Gaza.

The Red Sea is a vital source of food, especially in Yemen, where fishing was the second-largest export af‐ ter oil before the current civil war between the Houthis and Yemen's Sunni govern‐ ment.

"The most direct effect is one of tainting or contamina‐ tion, which means that the fish become inedible," said Peter Hodson, an oil spill ex‐ pert and professor emeritus with Queens University's School of Environmen­tal Studies in Kingston, Ont.

"The impacts are ulti‐ mately on a failure to repro‐ duce, or a lower reproduc‐ tion rate because fewer em‐ bryos and larvae survive."

Drinking water safety is of particular concern for Saudi Arabia, which for decades has been building the world's largest network of desalina‐ tion plants. Cities like Jeddah rely on the facilities for al‐ most all of their drinking wa‐ ter.

"If (oil) got into the intakes it would certainly start to af‐ fect the whole desalinati­on process," Hodson said. "You might end up having to ei‐ ther shut down the purifica‐ tion process, or risk heavy damage that would com‐ pletely destroy the desalina‐ tion plant."

Fertilizer 'could be the worst component'

It is difficult to gauge the risk from the fertilizer that the U.S. military's Central Command and port authori‐ ties in Djibouti, adjacent to where the Rubymar sank, said the ship was transport‐ ing.

Fertilizer can fuel the pro‐ liferation of algae blooms, re‐ sulting in the loss of oxygen, asphyxiati­on of marine life and the creation of so-called "dead zones."

Hodson said the effect will depend on how badly the ship has broken, which will determine how quickly the toxins spill out.

"The fertilizer could be the worst component of all this, but it really depends on how intact the ship is," he said.

The Red Sea is home to some of the world's most colourful and extensive coral reefs, which are also at risk. Several are major tourist draws and increasing­ly a sub‐ ject of great scientific re‐ search, owing to their ap‐ parent resilience to warming seawater temperatur­es.

Concerns raised about future spills

Ian Ralby, founder of mar‐ itime security firm I.R. Consil‐ ium, told the Associated Press that the Red Sea's unique circular water pat‐ terns aggravate these con‐ cerns. The patterns operate essentiall­y as a giant lagoon, he said, with water moving north toward the Suez Canal during winter and outward to the Gulf of Aden in summer.

"What spills in the Red Sea, stays in the Red Sea," he said.

Ralby said he worries that even if this spill is manage‐ able, there could be bigger disasters to come.

He said most container ships stopped using the Red Sea shipping lanes since the Houthis began targeting ships in the area. What re‐ mains, he said, are poorly maintained vessels, oil tankers and bulk carriers that pose far greater environmen‐ tal risks.

"With fewer and fewer container ships to target, the odds of another spill with massive environmen­tal im‐ pact has increased enor‐ mously," Ralby said.

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