VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД FIND US ON: YouTube Twitter
breakingnews
Go to main page   Programs   Prime Time Russia   News   Environment still in danger after oil spill  

Environment still in danger after oil spill

Published: 28 April, 2008, 05:23

(9.4Mb) embed video

Months after an oil spill in the Azov Sea last November the full extent of the damage is still unknown. The spill was the result of a storm that killed at least six sailors, sank four ships and split an oil tanker in two.

Around 9,000 fish and more than 30,000 birds have died on the coast since the disaster.
 
The Volgoneft-139 tanker broke-up in the Kerch Strait separating the Ukrainian and Russian coasts between the Black and the Azov Seas. As a result, 1,200 tonnes of oil were spilt into the sea.

Clean-up workers are still collecting what's left of last year's oil spill. After every storm in the Azov Sea, crews check the shoreline for oil and debris and some oil still has to be disposed of.

The region's unique wildlife has suffered the most. Environmental activists together with local hunters have been trying hard to save rare species. Many volunteers, including students from Krasnodar universities, went to help clean up the coastline.

They say that in November there was a dead bird every square metre along the shore. Now, with most of the oil gone, things are returning to normal.

World Wildlife Foundation activists, though, are cautious in their predictions. They say the oil that sank to the seabed last November is likely to resurface this spring.

+1 (1 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
Experimental capsule (computer graphics) 28.04.2008, 05:08

Russia inches towards mission to Mars

Air is crucial to human life, and the absence of a breathable atmosphere is one of the main obstacles to discovering other planets. Russian scientists have reproduced a gas mixture that human beings may breathe on the way to Mars and when on the Red Plane

Mars-500
28.04.2008, 05:51

Why are Britons putting their pensions into Russia?

One in three men and women of working age in Britain has no pension savings, according to the opposition Conservative Party’s latest report, and state pensions pay for essential items only. As a result, some are trying to find their own schemes and are ch