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Kerch Strait storm causes environmental catastrophy

13 November 2007
Rescue teams are searching for at least five seamen missing after a powerful storm hit the Kerch Strait between Russia and the Ukraine, but with a new storm on its way, officials say hopes of finding them alive are fading. The bodies of three sailors, still in life jackets, were washed ashore on Monday close to the island of Tuzla near the Kerch Strait, the maritime border between Russia and Ukraine. Thirty-six other crew members were rescued from the shipwrecks on Sunday. At the same time, a big operation, including the deployment of hundreds of Russian soldiers, has also begun to clean up the oil spill in the Kerch Strait, caused by a tanker which was torn apart in the storm. It was carrying 4,000 tonnes of fuel oil. A total of ten ships, including oil tanker Volganeft-139, sank or were run aground during the storm, battered by waves of up to 18 feet. Five-metre high waves broke apart the Volgoneft-139, on Sunday, causing some 2,000 tonnes of fuel oil to spill into the Kerch Strait, a waterway linking the Black Sea to the Sea of Azov. The spill from the oil tanker was seen as potentially the worst environmental disaster in the region in recent years. It prompted criticism that many Russian tankers aren't seaworthy. Tens of thousands of oil-slicked seabirds and globules of heavy oil dotted the shoreline, a day after at least 10 ships, including a small oil tanker, sank or broke apart in a fierce storm, Russian officials said. The World Wide Fund for Nature, a conservation group, said the heavy fuel oil also settled onto the seabed, surely destroying marine habitat and killing fish. Three Russian ships laden with sulphur sank in or near the port on Sunday and workers on Monday pumped fuel oil out of a tanker that suffered two cracks in the hull but was not believed to have leaked, officials said. Eight crewmembers of the sunken dry cargo ship, the Volnogorsk, have been rescued from a life raft in the Kerch Strait and taken to Tuzla Spit, a spokesman for the Krasnodar territorial emergency situations center has reported. The Volnogorsk, carrying over 2,000 tonnes of sulfur, sank off Port Kavkaz at 10:25 a.m., Moscow time, on Sunday, the Southern Regional Emergency Situations Center earlier told Interfax. The crew boarded the life raft. Tugboats were dispatched to the disaster area. sd The dry cargo ship, the Nakhichevan, with 11 crew aboard, also sank the Strait of Kerch - a third disaster during that day, the emergency headquarters at the Port of Kavkaz informed Interfax. The Volganeft 123 tanker had a crack. The Russian-owned Kovel, carrying sulphur, sank after hitting another Russian cargo ship, the Volnogorsk, which also sunk in the five-metre high waves and raging winds. The Dika barge carrying two crewmembers and about 4,500 tonnes of fuel oil ran aground in the southwestern part of the Tuzla Spit. It broke off from a towboat during the gale. The Demetra floating crane carrying one person drifted to the Tuzla Spit. The Russian-owned Vera Voloshina, carrying farming machines from Romania to Russia, ran aground near the Crimean resort of Sudak.

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re: Kerch Strait storm causes environmental catastrophy

By gcaptain.com 13/11/07 (2 years ago)

gcaptain.com

Kerch Strait storm causes environmental catastrophy...

Rescue teams are searching for at least five seamen missing after a powerful storm hit the Kerch Strait between Russia and the Ukraine, but with a new storm on its way, officials say hopes of finding them alive are fading....

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