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PA
environmental emergency

21 beaches polluted by oil spill in Peru linked to Tonga eruption

The Peruvian government has formed a committee to deal with the crisis.

PERU HAS DECLARED an environmental emergency after announcing that 21 beaches on the Pacific coast were contaminated by an oil spill at a refinery run by Spanish-based company Repsol, following surging waves caused by the eruption of an underwater volcano near Tonga.

President Pedro Castillo said a committee will be formed to propose ways of dealing with the crisis, in keeping with national policies aimed at protecting the environment.

Peru’s prime minister Mirtha Vasquez said Repsol has promised to deliver a cleaning schedule, to incorporate local fishermen in the clean-up on beaches and to deliver food baskets to affected families.

Vasquez said the United Nations will provide a team of experts to help Peru deal with the oil spill. People are barred for now from going to the 21 polluted beaches because of health concerns.

Peruvian authorities say an Italian-flagged ship spilled 6,000 barrels in the Pacific on Saturday in front of the La Pampilla refinery. In recent days, environmental activists have collected oil-stained or dead seabirds.

Repsol said Peruvian authorities had not provided a tsunami warning and that the ship was continuing to unload oil to the refinery when the waves struck.

2.64844782 Clean-up work takes place on Conchitas Beach in Ancon. PA PA

Hundreds of traditional fisherman living just outside the Peruvian capital fear their livelihoods are ruined following the oil spill.

Traditional fisherman in Ventanilla, a district to the north of Lima’s port in Callao, on Wednesday protested outside the gates of the Repsol’s Pampilla Refinery, demanding compensation for the spill that occurred as freak waves hit a tanker during offloading on Saturday.

“How will we live now? That’s our worry,” Miguel Angell Nunez, who led the protest, told AFP.

“We’ve lost our source of work and we don’t know when this will end.

“We want them to recognize the damage. The spill was caused by (Repsol’s) negligence.”

It is an area teeming with sole, lorna drum and Peruvian grunt, commonly used in the local delicacy ceviche, a marinated raw fish dish that Peru is famous for.

Traditional fishermen use small scale, low technology, low capital practices, mostly from the beach or rocks.

The few that own small boats only travel short distances along the shoreline.

‘Catastrophe’

The Ventanilla spill sent 6,000 barrels of oil into the sea.

The environment ministry said 174 hectares – equivalent to 270 football fields – of sea, beaches and natural reserves were affected.

The attorney general’s office said the spill had “put at risk flora and fauna in two protected areas.”

Authorities pulled dead fish and birds covered in oil out of the sea, and had to seal off three beaches, meaning hundreds of fishermen had nowhere to go to work.

workers-clean-up-an-oil-spill-caused-by-abnormal-waves-triggered-by-a-massive-underwater-volcanic-eruption-half-a-world-away-in-tonga-at-the-peruvian-beach-in-ventanilla-peru-january-18-2022-reu Workers clean up the oil spill at the Peruvian beach in Ventanilla. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

Refinery officials said they had erected “containment barriers that cover all of the affected zones and brigades with specialist sea and land teams have been deployed.”

But fishermen, some of whom live hand to mouth, fear that they could be prevented from working for years.

Around 1,500 traditional fisherman work in the area, usually earning between 50 and 120 soles (€11-€27) a day from their catch.

“This catastrophe won’t last one or four months. It will last years,” fisherman Roberto Carlos Espinoza told AFP.

“Today we don’t have work, what are we going to do?”

Espinoza blames Repsol for “lacking a contingency plan” for the damage to flora and fauna.

The spill has spread to beaches in neighboring districts where authorities have found dead sea lions and penguins.

‘Tough and toxic work’

Repsol work teams wearing white suits, boots and gloves were removing oil from beaches and crags on the Cavero beach in Ventanilla on Wednesday.

Workers use dustpans, shovels and long sponges to soak up the oil that cloaks the beach and gives off a pungent stench, while the navy guards the area.

Toiling in the summer sun, they tip the collected oil into barrels and plastic bags.

“It’s not easy to work with this (oil) but unfortunately we have to work,” said Giancarlo Briseno.

“The work is tough, quite toxic and burns your face,” added Pedro Guzman.

a-worker-cleans-up-an-oil-spill-caused-by-abnormal-waves-triggered-by-a-massive-underwater-volcanic-eruption-half-a-world-away-in-tonga-at-the-peruvian-beach-in-ventanilla-peru-january-18-2022-r A worker cleans up the oil on a beach in Peru. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

Former environment minister Fabiola Munoz said it would take two years to clean up the spill.

The public prosecutor has opened an investigation for environmental pollution against the refinery.

It said the owners could face a fine of up to $34.5 million.

“The State will be inflexible,” warned Environment Minister Ruben Ramirez.

Tine van den Wall Bake Rodriguez, Repsol Peru’s spokeswoman, said “we cannot say who is responsible” for the oil spill, which the company has blamed on the freak waves.

“We are extremely affected” by it, she added.

The Pampilla refinery has the capacity to process 117,000 barrels a day, which represents more than half of Peru’s total oil output.

Two women in Peru drowned after being swept away by strong waves following the Tonga eruption.

With reporting from © – AFP, 2022.

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