The National - News

Fujairah oil spill blamed on tankers cleaning holds

▶ Port manager calls for 24-hour monitoring to clamp down on rogue vessels causing the problem

- JOHN DENNEHY

An oil spill that hit the Fujairah coast on January 26 was the result of tankers illegally cleaning out their holds.

That is according to the general manager of Fujairah port, Capt Mousa Murad, who has called for 24-hour monitoring of ships to tackle the issue.

“The recent spills have been caused by tank cleaning by passing ships,” Capt Murad told The National yesterday.

“Especially when tankers change from [carrying] one product to another,” he said, implying that the spills were made up of residue cleaned from within the tanks. “[The oil] comes from internatio­nal waters and could hit Dibba, Fujairah or Khor Fakkan.”

Capt Murad said the port is working with the Ministry of Climate Change and Environmen­t and the UAE Armed Forces to address the problem.

Apart from individual states, the Arabian Gulf is monitored by the Marine Emergency Mutual Aid Centre and the Regional Organisati­on for the Protection of the Marine Environmen­t.

But Capt Murad said it needed even more surveillan­ce.

“It requires 24-hour monitoring. This is what happens in Europe and Scandinavi­a and Japan, so you can take action immediatel­y when someone is polluting the water.”

The issue is now in the spotlight again after the Al Aqah spill in January, which affected tourism and damaged marine life. Last year, the east coast of the UAE was hit by several oil slicks.

The UAE’s waters extend for 12 nautical miles. Under UAE Federal Law No24, all marine means of transport are prohibited from dischargin­g or disposing of oil or oil mixture into the marine environmen­t. Penalties include imprisonme­nt and fines of up to Dh1 million.

But most of these incidents happen in internatio­nal waters, where they are difficult to police.

“The UAE has enacted laws banning the throwing of waste and oil sludge into the water by the hundreds of tankers operating in the region,” said Salah Al Rayssi, director of the fisheries sustainabi­lity department at the Ministry of Climate Change and Environmen­t.

“The ministry works closely with local authoritie­s to respond in real time to oil-spill incidents by overseeing the clean-up of contaminat­ed beaches along the east coast of the UAE, finding the perpetrato­rs and holding them accountabl­e for their actions.”

Mr Al Rayssi said the ministry is working to enhance an oil spill monitoring and detection system.

TankerTrac­kers.com, a pro-bono website that monitors the flow of oil at sea and investigat­es oil spills, previously suggested that January’s spill was caused by a ship-to-ship transfer.

These happen when a smaller vessel supplies a larger one with oil and spills from overflow occurring through negligence or by accident. The UAE has been tackling the issue for years. Fujairah Port in 2005 prohibited ship-to-ship transfers in the port area.

In 2007, the UAE signed up to the Internatio­nal Maritime Organisati­on’s “internatio­nal convention for the prevention of pollution from ships”. Also known as the Marpol convention, it sets limits for discharge from oil tankers, including in the “special area” of the Arabian Gulf into the Sea of Oman.

Capt Murad said that “ship-to-ship transfers were an old issue”.

“We now have a problem with passing ships,” he said.

Some ships have also been fined for illegally dumping into the water – the oil tanker Georgios was fined last year for dischargin­g oil and chemical waste into the Sea of Oman.

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 ?? Juman Jarallah / The National; Randi Sokoloff / The National ?? Top, oil washes ashore at Al Aqah, Fujairah, following last month’s spill caused by a tanker flushing out its hold. Above, workers from Sharjah Municipali­ty clean the beach after an oil slick off the east coast washed up in Khor Fakkan in February 2008
Juman Jarallah / The National; Randi Sokoloff / The National Top, oil washes ashore at Al Aqah, Fujairah, following last month’s spill caused by a tanker flushing out its hold. Above, workers from Sharjah Municipali­ty clean the beach after an oil slick off the east coast washed up in Khor Fakkan in February 2008

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