Sri Lanka braces for environmental disaster as ship sinks

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Smoke rises from a fire onboard the MV X-Press Pearl vessel in the seas off the Colombo Harbour. — Reuters
Smoke rises from a fire onboard the MV X-Press Pearl vessel in the seas off the Colombo Harbour. — Reuters

Colombo - MV X-Press Pearl started sinking a day after authorities extinguished a fire that raged on for 12 days.

By AP

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Published: Thu 3 Jun 2021, 9:05 PM

Last updated: Thu 3 Jun 2021, 9:24 PM

Authorities in Sri Lanka were trying to head off a potential environmental disaster on Thursday as a fire-damaged container ship that had been carrying chemicals was sinking off the country’s main port.

The Singapore-flagged MV X-Press Pearl started sinking on Wednesday, a day after authorities extinguished a fire that raged on the vessel for 12 days. Efforts to tow the ship into deeper waters away from the port in Colombo failed after the ship’s stern became submerged and rested on the seabed.

The ship’s operators, X-Press Feeders, say the fire destroyed most of the ship’s cargo, which included 25 tonnes of nitric acid and other chemicals. But there are fears that remaining chemicals as well as hundreds of tonnes of oil from the vessel’s fuel tanks could leak into the sea.

Such a disaster could devastate marine life and further pollute the island nation’s famed beaches. The disaster has already caused debris — including several tonnes of plastic pellets used to make plastic bags — to wash a ashore.

The government already has banned fishing along about 80 kilometres of coastline.

The ship operator said on Thursday that the vessel’s stern was resting on the seabed about 21 metres below the surface and the ship’s bow was “settling down slowly”. It said salvage experts were remaining with the vessel “to monitor the ship’s condition and oil pollution”.

The company said its experts were coordinating with Sri Lanka’s navy to deal with an oil spill or other pollution.

Sri Lankan navy spokesman Indika de Silva said the navy and coast guard were preparing for a spill with assistance from neighbouring India. India has sent three ships to help, including one specifically equipped to deal with marine pollution.

Colombo port’s harbour master, Nirmal Silva, said there had been about 300 tonnes of oil on board and that experts believe it could have burned off in the fire.

“But we have to look at the worst-case scenario and we are not saying 100 per cent there is no oil. There is a possibility that there may be some,” Silva said. “So far we have not seen any oil spill. We consider we are lucky.”

A ship manifest described the X-Press Pearl as carrying just under 1,500 containers, with 81 of those containers described as carrying “dangerous” goods.

Environmentalist Ajantha Perera said there was the potential for “a terrible environmental disaster” as hazardous goods, chemicals and oil could be released into the water and destroy marine ecological systems.

Charitha Pattiaratchi, a professor of oceanography at the University of Western Australia, said as many as 3 billion tiny plastic pellets had already been released into the sea and were washing up on beaches. He said the pellets, known as nurdles, “will persist in the marine environment forever as they are not biodegradable.”

The fire erupted on May 20 when the ship was anchored about 9.5 nautical miles northwest of Colombo and waiting to enter the port.

The navy believes the blaze was caused by the vessel’s chemical cargo which was carrying from the port of Hazira, India.

Sri Lankan police are probing the fire, and a court in Colombo on Tuesday banned the captain, the engineer and the assistant engineer from leaving the country. The government has said it will take legal action against the owners of the ship to claim compensation.

Sri Lanka’s Environment Minister Mahinda Amaraweera said “it wouldn’t be an easy task to calculate the damage caused to our environment”.

He told the media late on Wednesday that an investigation was under way to determine what went wrong and whether the shipping company was responsible.

“If this disaster happened due to negligence, then those responsible should be punished,” he said.


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