Oil Plant Leak Damages Third of Lebanon's Coast

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Leaking oil from a bombed power station in Lebanon has damaged about a third of the country's coastline, the world's top maritime body said on Wednesday.

LONDON — Leaking oil from a bombed power station in Lebanon has damaged about a third of the country's coastline, the world's top maritime body said on Wednesday.


The U.N. International Maritime Organisation (IMO) said in a statement that some 10,000 tonnes of fuel oil had spilled into the Mediterranean from the damaged Jiyyeh plant south of Beirut.


It said another 25,000 tonnes of the heavy oil slurry -- similar to the type that devastated beaches in northern Spain following the Prestige oil tanker disaster in 2002 -- could still escape from ruptured storage tanks.


"The Lebanese coastline, for some 70-80 km north of the power plant, has been affected. These areas are composed of sandy beaches, rocky beaches, fishing ports and marinas," the IMO said.


Lebanon's Environment Ministry says Israeli jets hit the storage tanks on July 13 and 15 and described the leakage as an environmental catastrophe.


Ecologists say the spill is especially threatening because fish spawn and sea turtles, including the green turtle which is endangered in the Mediterranean, nest on Lebanon's coast.


IMO is co-ordinating an international effort to assist Lebanon in dealing with the disaster.


The Prestige which leaked 80 percent of its 77,000 tonne cargo cost Spain dear. The oil damaged large stretches of the coast, devastating tourism, fishing and wildlife.


Source: Reuters


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