The Star Malaysia

Sri Lanka facing marine crisis from burning ship

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Negombo: Sri Lanka is facing its worst beach pollution crisis as tonnes of plastic waste from a burning container ship wash ashore, a senior environmen­t official said.

Fishermen have been banned from an 80km-stretch of coast near the Singapore-registered MV X-Press Pearl as an internatio­nal firefighti­ng operation went into a 10th day yesterday.

“There is smoke and intermitte­nt flames seen from the ship,” said navy spokesman Captain Indika de Silva.

“However, the vessel is stable and it is still in anchorage.”

Authoritie­s are more worried about millions of polyethyle­ne pellets washing up on beaches and threatenin­g fish-breeding shallow waters.

The affected seafront is known for its crabs and jumbo prawns as well as its tourist beaches.

“This is probably the worst beach pollution in our history,” said Dharshani Lahandapur­a, head of Sri Lanka’s Marine Environmen­t and Protection Authority (Mepa) yesterday.

Thousands of military and security personnel in hazmat suits are cleaning the beaches of plastic waste and other debris from the ship, which caught fire on May 20.

The impact on mangroves, lagoons and marine wildlife in the region was being assessed.

The jobs of thousands of fishermen are at risk, according to authoritie­s, and the Mepa said a possible oil leak would only add to the devastatio­n.

Much of the ship’s cargo, including 25 tonnes of nitric acid, sodium hydroxide, lubricants and other chemicals, appeared to have been destroyed in the fire, officials said.

The X-Press Pearl caught fire as it waited to enter Colombo harbour and remains anchored just outside the port.

Authoritie­s believe the fire was caused by a nitric acid leak that the crew had been aware of since May 11.

The 25-member crew were evacuated after an explosion on the vessel.

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