Frequent oil spills in the Red Sea off the coast of Egypt kill marine life and damage the environment.
By Joseph Mayton | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor/ November 5, 2009 edition
CAIRO
Egyptian tourism commercials present the Red Sea as an untouched paradise where “the sun shines 365 days a year” and the water is full of exuberant marine life. But the reality is that the beaches and marine life are being destroyed as a result of offshore oil drilling and spills.
On May 20, oil spilled onto the shores just north of the popular resort town of Hurghada, some five hours southeast of Cairo. Although small in comparison with spills elsewhere, more than two-thirds of a mile of sandy beach was covered with crude oil.
According to the country’s environment ministry, workers “moved immediately to the northern coastal region of Hurghada, where they met [oil] company officials to inspect the beach and they found large quantities of crude oil in the form of small pieces along the beach.”
Mahmoud Ismail, the head of the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA), is proud of the work his organization does during what he termed “routine oil spills.”
“Our organization is there so we can monitor and help to connect oil companies with the necessary means of clean-up during the routine oil spills that occur in the Red Sea,” he says. “Just look at the most recent one, the beaches were completely cleaned in less than one week.”
But environmentalists point to continuing damage to the Red Sea from frequent “routine” oil spills.
Mr. Ismail says that around the 26 oil fields in the Red Sea, marine life is non-existent due to the almost constant leakage from the antiquated equipment used by oil companies, including such giants as British Petroleum (BP), and ExxonMobil. “Unfortunately, around these major centers of oil exploration, sea life is gone,” he says.
Ahmed al-Droubi, an environmental consultant in Cairo, argues that the situation is much worse than the government is willing to admit. He says that along the coastal region, in addition to the central oil areas, the environmental impact has been near catastrophic.
“If you look at the area along the Red Sea, from Ismailia to Hurghada, these beaches are almost entirely destroyed,” Mr. Droubi says. “What you have are hotels hauling in sand in order to make it appear that this is pristine land, but reality is much different: In and around Hurghada, as a result of the oil, there is no marine life.”
Droubi says that the EEAA does exceptional work, considering what they are up against, but action needs to be taken in order to prevent more damage. “We must see efforts to document and help renew the marine life and the coastal areas, because this is part of our future.”
In 2006, two major oil spills occurred in the Red Sea and inside the Suez Canal at Bitter Lake, where passing ships wait before continuing through the one-lane canal. At least 3,300 tons of heavy fuel oil spilled into the Red Sea on Feb. 20 that year. And in September, 1,100 tons of crude oil poured into Bitter Lake.
Smaller spills, similar to the one in Hurghada in May, occur almost monthly, both Ismail and Droubi confirm.
Ismail concedes that Bitter Lake’s ecosystem is no longer functioning. “Fisheries have died, fishermen can no longer work, but the government has compensated them for their losses,” he adds.
“We have nowhere to go,” says Ahmed al-Zayed, a local fisherman whose family once made a living scouring the depths of Bitter Lake. “When I was a child, my father and I used to go out into the lake and we could catch a lot of fish, but now, because of the oil, there is nothing. I haven’t been out in years and when I talk to friends [about] the Red Sea, they tell me the same thing.”
Droubi argues that there needs to be a law requiring pipes and drilling equipment in the Red Sea to be updated. Ismail concurs, saying that much of the machinery is more than 25 years old.
Although the EEAA now concentrates its efforts mostly on cleaning up after spills, that may change. In early May, Environment Minister George Maged established an advisory committee to look into the pollution caused by oil in the Red Sea and its coastal region.
Source: http://features.csmonitor.com/environment/2009/11/05/oil-spills-poison-the-red-sea/
Oil spills poison the Red Sea
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hurghada is going down in full speed....the last 5 years nature suffers big time...even on touristic places like giftun Island west of mahmeya, island of abo minkar on north side - shocking pictures of black oil spots and waste of tourists, or over board throwns by the island excursions...there is intensive action requestet to rescue the environment.
Me, personally whitness so many garbage bags floating on the water, right after the excursion boats??? wonder howe they get there...
I hope the locals wake up and protect their treassures....soon, otherwise its getting too late!
Just today I saw a snorkeling boat empty oily water just outside small Giftun island, just 50 meters outside from where people snorkel.
A lot of the people working with the tourists, do not seem to understand that no reefs and fish = no work or money. They grow up among the rubbish (not an overstatement, look where the children are playing in the backstreet in El Dahar!) so they do not think garbage or a little bit oil is so bad. Unfortunately, there are hundreds of boats with people like that in Hurghada. Some few behave, but 75% do not.
If you dive or snorkel in the beaches in Sigala, where boats park, you find anything from empty Coca Cola bottles to oil filter. In piles, so they did not fall overboard in mistake.
Oh, and do not forget to take a tour in the dry dock area after 4 pm. Guess where the snorkeling boats that is parked there clean their garbage? Boat after boat empty their garbage in the sea.
Look in the touristic harbor or Marine Sport club how the boats fill gas. Every time there is liters that leak from broken pipelines and bad handling. Every fill, every day. There is actually a place to leave the garbage in the Marine Sport Club, but have anyone heard of a place to empty a septic tank. No? Well, me neither. The Red Sea is a not just an dump, it is a toilet. Take care next time you go snorkeling in Small Giftun or Gota Abu Ramada. Do not inhale water! If you are there lunchtime, count how many persons have been on the toilet just on the same line where you are.
I have even seen a liveaboard (from a German good reputation company) dump big black plastic garbage bags in the water while passing Abu Mungar. I suppose they where on a tight schedule and cleaning while driving south.
The handling of garbage and especially close to the sea is a SHAME for Egypt. This is your heritage, your future, your land. Wake up now and take some responsibility for what is happening.
A dead sea is nothing that comes as a surprise, it is a murder that takes a long time to commit.
To all Red Sea tourists, divers, and guides:
It's simply not enough to complain on blogs. Those despoiling the Red Sea need to feel your disapproval in tangible ways.
The Egyptian authorities, however good their intentions, are still chronically underfunded and undermanned. It is absolutely unrealistic to expect them to be able to patrol every snorkelling/diving site, every day (and even if they did, crews are hardly likely to dump garbage right in front of them). Only through public pressure will the dumpers be exposed and face punishment.
If you care about keeping the Red Sea pristine, please do the following:
Legal action cannot be taken without documentary evidence. If you see any boat crews dumping rubbish/waste overboard, take a photograph (unobtrusively, if possible). Try to include the boat name/number, or at least the company logo, and send your photos to HEPCA (http://www.hepca.com/contact-hepca.aspx), with the date(s) and location(s) where the criminal offences (dumping IS illegal) occurred.
If you see your own boat crew doing so, please first speak (politely) to your guide (or the captain, if you are the guide), explaining why dumping is such a very bad idea. If they ignore you, or laugh it off, report them to HEPCA.
If you are a customer on a diveboat, point out to the divecentre who organised your trip that knowingly employing boatcrews who are dumping garbage will get them a very bad press back home (via e.g. dive magazines). Remember, if it's true, it's not libel.
Keeping the seas safe and clean is everyone's responsibility.
Happy diving.
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