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FATAL OIL SLICKS

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     (17-05-10) Hydrocarbon spills in the marine environment continue to be one of the major threats to ecosystems and the species that comprise them. They cause direct impacts that can last up to 100 years, and they bring about a bioaccumulation of pollutants in organisms.

    Spills on the high seas can affect cetaceans, turtles and birds as well as highly fragile deepwater. Whereas on the shore, they can reach areas of high ecological value and impregnate rocks and the entire substrate in their wake, thus making cleanup tasks hugely difficult, that hardly will reach 100%.

Fatal oil slicks Mareas de muerte negra     Avoiding this type of spill in the marine environment has to come about by reducing our dependence. An adaptation of the energy model to renewable energies is increasingly an urgent need. We must remember that the purpose of all hydrocarbons is to be burned as an energy source. Therefore, if it is spilled by accident or if used for its end use, it has an impact on the marine environment that must be reduced to zero.

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     Europe is also threatened by these risks. The Northern Sea is one of the most important areas for off-shore drilling. However other drillings in the Mediterranean coastlines of Italy, Tunisia, Malta, Libya, Croatia or Spain can be found as well.

WHAT CAUSES OIL SPILLS?

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     Ship accidents. Oil tankers have the capacity to transport between 50,000 and 500,000 tons in their tanks, the routes our preestablished. This generates areas of greater risk of spills. Accidental spills are well-known, the Exxon Valdez 1989, Erika 1999, Prestige 2002 and their effects tend to reach the shore, bringing on the destruction of important ecosystems and local ways of life, such as small-scale fishing or tourism.

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     Spills on oil rigs. Oil rigs on the high seas are high-risk activities. They may be situated on a water column more than 1,000 m deep and drill 2,000 or 3,000 meters in the marine subsoil. These rigs’ spills can come about during the exploration phase, upon locating the pocket of crude oil, during exploitation, due to isolated leaks or from accidents, such as the one that occurred in the Gulf of Mexico whose effects are devastating because of the continuous spill of thousands of tons from the sea bottom.

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     Transferring accidents. Sea transport of crude oil generates another risk: unloading or transferring it from ship to land, from rig to ship or from land to ship. These operations are usually performed with the use of floating single buoys offshore. On occasion, these connections to land pipelines fail, thus causing spills into the sea of different magnitudes. This type of facility therefore creates an ongoing risk for spills in the area, both due to the transfer operation and the dense shipping traffic in the area.

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     Chronic occurrences (Bilge cleaning). The illegal and regular cleaning of the bilge on the high seas. Bilges are the tanks that receive waste from the engine room and cleaning out the tanks with a high concentration of oil and fuel residue. Currently, they are one of the main causes of spills in the marine environment. They are particularly worrying due to their scattered and hard to control origin.

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     Leaks. The leaks issuing from rigs, pipelines and other means of crude oil almost inevitably wind up in the marine environment, thus generating another source of hydrocarbon pollution.

WHAT CONSEQUENCES DO THEY HAVE?

    The effects of a hydrocarbon spill depend on its composition, the area it affects and the volume of the spill.

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     Fuel oil or heavy hydrocarbons are black, viscous, non-water-soluble and with an ignition point above 65 ºC. They cause a floating mass that limits the light that enters the marine environment, hinders animals such as cetaceans, turtles and those that need to rise to the surface from breathing and impregnate birds that are within the spill radius.

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     Deepwater spills are especially harmful because at low temperatures, they increase their density, remaining at the bottom for tens of years without being able to remove them. Likewise, on the shore, they produce severe damage upon impregnating rocks, coastal ecosystems and submerged and emerging sandy area. This makes it practically impossible to completely remove them, and they cause pernicious effects for decades.

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     Diesel oil or light spills take on shades that are between amber and blackish, water soluble and with an ignition point above 55º C. As a general rule, they are volatile. Therefore, spills partially pass into the atmosphere. Nevertheless, their soluble nature makes them hazardous when they disperse via water and being easily assimilated by organisms.

    Both tend to be assimilated by marine organisms, especially those that live anchored to the bottom because it is impossible for them to move around. Absorption by prairies and other photophilous organisms generates the first step of bioaccumulation.

Fatal oil slicks Fatal oil slicks     Therefore, these pollutants pass from one to others upon being consumed, and their concentration increases as they go up the food chain. Thus, large predators (where human beings are the last link) are the ones that accumulate the highest amount of these pollutants in their bodies.

 

 

Text: Oceana / mn

 
 
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