Manila Standard

Oil spill threatens Mindoro island’s rich marine biodiversi­ty

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AN UGLY oil spill has blemished the seascape of Mindoro island.

Thousands of fishermen in the Philippine­s have been ordered to stay ashore days after the accident as authoritie­s struggled in to contain an oil spill from a sunken tanker that is threatenin­g the region’s rich marine life and economy.

The slick off Mindoro island, south of the capital Manila, stretched for 120 kilometers (75 miles) and was about nine kilometers offshore, said Ram Temena, disaster operations chief in the affected province of Mindoro Oriental.

Princess Empress had engine trouble and sank in rough seas off Naujan municipali­ty on Feb. 28. It was carrying 800,000 liters (210,000 gallons) of industrial fuel oil from Bataan province, near Manila, to the central province of Iloilo.

Another vessel rescued the 20 crew members on board.

Diesel fuel, which had been powering the Philippine tanker, and some of the cargo have leaked into the sea, the coast guard said previously, sparking concern for the environmen­t and industries dependent on the ocean.

Coast guard spokesman Armando Balilo said experts and major oil firms were being consulted over how to recover the industrial fuel oil from the tanker, which is more than 400 meters (more than 1,300 feet) below sea level.

“It is beyond the capability of technical divers,” Balilo told reporters.

“Second, we do not have the mechanical equipment, submersibl­e, that can dive to syphon it off without endangerin­g (crew) lives.”

Rough seas have prevented the deployment of oil spill booms to stop the toxic material from spreading, Balilo said.

Instead, they were spraying chemical dispersant­s on the water surface to break down the oil.

It is not known how much diesel fuel and industrial fuel oil are in the water.

The situation was “getting worse,” said Oriental Mindoro Gov. Humerlito Dolor.

He had ordered the province’s 18,000 registered fishermen to stay on shore until it was safe to fish. In the meantime, they would receive food packs.

“It will have a big impact on us,” Dolor said. “Based on experience, the adverse effects on the community will be long term.”

An estimated 591 hectares (1,460 acres) of coral reefs, 1,626 hectares of mangroves and 362 hectares of seaweed could be “potentiall­y affected” by the oil spill, Environmen­t Secretary Maria Antonia Loyzaga said.

The tanker sank near the Verde Island Passage―a busy sea lane between the main island of Luzon and Mindoro―which Loyzaga said was “globally recognized” for its marine biodiversi­ty.

Pola Mayor Jennifer Cruz said some dead fish coated with oil had washed up on the shores of the municipali­ty, which is one down from Naujan.

“Our entire coastline was hit by the spill,” said Cruz.

“Earlier, we could smell the foul odor. It’s like we’re inside an auto shop.” oil

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