Google – AFP, Apilaporn Vechaku (AFP), 31 July 2013
KO SAMET, Thailand — Environmentalists accused a Thai energy firm on Tuesday of understating the extent of a major pipeline leak as the navy warned the oil slick might reach the mainland.
![]() |
Thai Royal
Navy personnel clean Ao Phrao beach on the island of Ko
Samet after a major oil
slick on July 30, 2013 (AFP, Nicolas Asfouri)
|
KO SAMET, Thailand — Environmentalists accused a Thai energy firm on Tuesday of understating the extent of a major pipeline leak as the navy warned the oil slick might reach the mainland.
Tourists
were leaving the resort island of Ko Samet in the Gulf of Thailand as workers
in protective suits used hoses, buckets and shovels to clean up blackened sand
and oil which washed ashore on a once-idyllic beach.
PTT Global
Chemical said it was close to removing the oil from Ao Phrao beach on the
island, which lies in the protected Khao Laem Ya National Park off the eastern
province of Rayong.
"The
clean-up operation is 80 percent complete," said PTT Global Chemical
executive vice president Porntep Butniphant, who was overseeing the operation.
![]() |
Map
locating Ko Samet in Thailand where
some 50,000 litres of crude oil gushed
into
the sea from a leak (AFP/File)
|
Conservationist
group Greenpeace, however, said much more work needed to be done.
"It's
not true to claim that 80 percent of the work is done. There is a lot of oil
still in the bay," Greenpeace campaigner Ply Pirom said.
"It's
very disappointing that this global company has no emergency plan to deal with
the crisis."
A naval
commander said there was a risk the oil would wash ashore on the mainland.
"A
thin film of oil may reach the mainland. It has started to go towards
there," Vice Admiral Roongsak Sereeswad told AFP, adding: "It might
take a week to control it."
The
government said 600 workers, including military personnel and PTT staff, were
engaged in the clean-up.
Some
visitors have cut short their holidays on Ko Samet, a popular destination for
weekend breaks for Bangkok residents.
"About
30 percent of the tourists have left the island", Chairat
Trirattanajarasporn, president of the Rayong Tourist Association, told AFP.
"There
are no tourists coming in any more, only people leaving. Some groups already
cancelled bookings. Some are scared and started to leave," Chairat added.
![]() |
Thai Royal
Navy personnel work to clean
up oil from Ao Phrao beach on the island
of Ko
Samet on July 30, 2013 (AFP,
Nicolas Asfouri)
|
PTT said
the spillage came as crude oil from an Omani tanker moored offshore was being
transferred to the pipeline for delivery to its refinery.
Greenpeace
on Monday urged Thailand to end oil drilling and exploration in the Gulf of
Thailand in light of the leak.
Conservationists
have voiced concern about the impact on marine life of the oil as well as the
chemicals used to disperse the spill in an area frequented by fishermen.
"The
effects on the coastal area ecology will be quite big," Ratana Munprasit,
director of the Eastern Marine Fisheries Research and Development Center, told
AFP.
![]() |
Thai Royal
Navy personnel clean up a
beach after a major oil slick on the
island of Ko
Samet on July 30,
2013 (AFP, Nicolas Asfouri)
|
Prime
Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, who is on an official trip to Africa, ordered the
navy and various ministries quickly to solve the problem.
She also
said PTT must bear responsibility for the spill.
One Bangkok
tour operator launched an appeal for people to donate hair to make a boom to
absorb the oil.
"An
oil expert said hair can absorb spilled oil so we will collect hair to make a
hair sausage," Thammtorn Junprasert said.
"I'm
now contacting hotels for donation of old pillows stuffed with duck
feathers," he added.
Koh Samet island (EPA)
|





No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.