San Francisco Chronicle

Tanker poised to cleave as oil fouls coastline

- By Andrew Meldrum Andrew Meldrum is an Associated Press writer.

JOHANNESBU­RG — Urgent efforts increased in Mauritius on Monday to empty a stranded Japanese ship of an estimated 2,500 tons of oil before the vessel breaks up and compounds the contaminat­ion of the island’s oncepristi­ne coastline.

More than 1,000 tons of the fuel already has washed up on the eastern coast of Mauritius, polluting its coral reefs, lagoons and shoreline.

High winds and waves are pounding the Japanese bulk carrier MV Wakashio, which ran aground on a coral reef two weeks ago and is showing signs of breaking up and dumping its remaining cargo of oil into the Indian Ocean waters surroundin­g Mauritius.

“We are expecting the worst,” said Jean Hugues Gardenne of the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation.

“The ship is showing really big, big cracks. We believe it will break into two at any time, at the maximum within two days,” said Gardenne. “So much oil remains in the ship, so the disaster could become much worse. It’s important to remove as much oil as possible. Helicopter­s are taking out the fuel little by little.”

French experts have arrived from the nearby island of Reunion and are deploying booms to try to contain any new oil spill, Gardenne said. France sent a navy ship, military aircraft and technical advisers after Mauritius appealed for internatio­nal help.

The booms will boost the improvised barriers that thousands of volunteers in Mauritius created from fabric tubes stuffed with straw and sugar cane leaves.

Amid rough seas, efforts are also under way to get other ships close enough to pump large amounts of oil out of the Japanese bulk carrier.

“The danger of the ship breaking into two is increasing hour by hour,” said Sunil Dowarkasin­g, an environmen­tal consultant and former member of parliament in Mauritius. “Two ships are headed to the site so that fuel can be pumped into them, but it is very difficult.”

The Japaneseow­ned ship ran aground on July 25 but work to remove its oil only started last week when the ship cracked and started emptying the fuel into the sea.

Pressure is mounting on the government of Prime Minister Pravind

Jugnauth to explain why it did not take immediate action to avert the environmen­tal disaster. Jugnauth has declared the oil spill a national emergency, but some residents say he acted too late.

 ?? Gwendoline Defente / French Defense Ministry ?? Oil spews Sunday from the MV Wakashio, which ran aground on a coral reef two weeks ago off Mauritius.
Gwendoline Defente / French Defense Ministry Oil spews Sunday from the MV Wakashio, which ran aground on a coral reef two weeks ago off Mauritius.

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