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Cleanup
of Lebanon's massive oil spill has barely begun
By Ann Chaon
AFP
BEIRUT
Petroleumworld.com
08 26 06
Cleanup of a massive oil slick along Lebanon's coast has barely begun
more than one month after Israel's bombing of a power plant unleashed
the pollution.
At a bend in the boardwalk along the edge of Beirut, thick and nauseating
black water laps against about 20 flat-bottomed fishing boats sheltered
in a cove toward the south of the city.
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) estimates that between
10,000 and 15,000 tonnes (11,000-16,500 tons) of fuel oil leaked from
the Jiyeh electric power plant in mid-July after two Israeli air raids.
The seaside plant, 30 kilometres (19 miles) south of Beirut, burned
for 12 days.
The spill has polluted about 200 kilometres (124 miles) of the Lebanese
and Syrian coasts, the European Union said.
On Friday the Lebanese civil defence agency, advised by Danish experts,
began to clean oil at the cove, and at the Raouche port in Beirut.
Teams have also been at work 40 kilometers north at the ancient port
city and tourist site of Byblos, where in 10 days they extracted 250
tonnes (275 tons) of oil, said Ian Nedsa, one of the European Union's
Danish experts in Beirut.
At the capital's only public beach, Ramlet el-Baida, local environmental
group Greenline started on Thursday collecting polluted sand after two
interruptions by the police.
Along with Jiyeh itself, these are the sites most affected by the oil,
said Mohammed el-Sarji, president of the Lebanese professional divers'
union who photographed the sea bed to assess the spill's impact.
"The presence of oil was detected there to a depth of between three
and five metres (9.9 and 16.5 feet) and a breadth of eight metres off
Jiyeh," he said.
Minister of Environment Yaacoub Sarraf said all available equipment
is at the scene.
"But it's not enough," he said.
"Today we received pumps and floating dams from Norway and Kuwait
and we are waiting for more from France, Jordan and Spain."
Sarraf said an Israeli blockade has hindered the cleanup effort.
Israel imposed the air, sea and land blockade when war broke out with
the Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah on July 12, and it remains in
place despite a ceasefire that took effect on August 14. Israel said
the move aims to stop Hezbollah from smuggling arms into Lebanon.
Sarraf said he is hoping a United Nations helicopter will be able to
fly over the area on Monday or Tuesday to assess the spill's spread.
"It is indispensable to evaluate the risks," he said.
Immediate helicopter surveys and a joint effort to clean up to 30 coastal
sites in Lebanon were part of a recovery plan unveiled this month by
senior officials from the United Nations, the European Union and regional
states meeting in Greece.
The operation would cost at least 50 million euros (64 million dollars).
Israeli authorities has given safety assurances for aerial UN surveillance
missions, the United Nations Environment Programme has said.
"Certain beaches that had been cleaned, like in Byblos, were soiled
again by oil that stays on the surface," said Gaby Khalaf, director
of the National Centre of Marine Research in Batroun, north of Beirut.
Rick Steiner, an American expert dispatched by the World Conservation
Union (IUCN), said "the marine and coastal ecosystem is more contaminated
than was thought."
After cleaning the beaches and rocks, it will be "indispensable
to recover the maximum amount of oil again from the surface and especially
at the bottom of the water," Steiner said, recommending use of
remote-control robots to collect pollutants from the depths.
Greenline has called the oil spill the biggest environmental disaster
in the Mediterranean basin.
Last week the Finnish presidency of the EU urged member states to provide
more technical assistance, saying the cleanup could take years.
AFP
26 0926 GMT 08 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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