(Reuters) – Russia on Saturday declared a regional state of emergency in Crimea, which it seized from Ukraine in 2014, as workers cleared tons of contaminated sand and soil on both sides of the Kerch Strait following an oil spill in the Black Sea last month. past. .
Mikhail Razvozhaev, the Russian-installed governor of the city of Sevastopol, said new traces of minor contamination required urgent removal and declared a state of emergency in the city, giving authorities more power to make quick decisions, such as ordering citizens to evacuate their homes.
The Kerch Strait runs between the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov and separates the Kerch Peninsula in Crimea from Russia’s Krasnodar region.
Rescue teams have cleared more than 86,000 metric tons of contaminated sand and soil, the Emergencies Ministry said Saturday. Oil leaked from two old tankers that were hit by a storm on December 15. One sank and the other ran aground.
More than 10,000 people have been working to shovel slimy, smelly fuel from the sandy beaches of Anapa, a summer resort, and its surrounding areas. Environmental groups have reported deaths of dolphins, porpoises and seabirds.
The Emergencies Ministry said on the Telegram messaging app that oil-contaminated soil had been collected in Russia’s broader Kuban region and in Crimea, whose annexation by Russia has not been recognized by most other countries.
The ministry released video footage of dozens of workers in protective suits loading bags of soil into excavators and others removing dirt from the sand with shovels.
Russia’s Transport Ministry said this week that experts had established that around 2,400 metric tons of petroleum products had spilled into the sea, a smaller spill than initially feared.
When the disaster struck, state media reported that the affected tankers, both more than 50 years old, were carrying about 9,200 metric tons (62,000 barrels) of petroleum products in total.
The spill involved M100 grade heavy fuel oil that solidifies at a temperature of 25 degrees Celsius (77 degrees Fahrenheit) and, unlike other petroleum products, does not float to the surface but sinks to the bottom or remains suspended in the water column.
(This story has been corrected to say that Razvozhaev is governor of Sevastopol, not Crimea, in paragraph 2)