“This is an extremely serious spill,....it is a persistent oil.”
Texas
Barge Collision Spills Up To 168,000 Gallons Of ‘Sticky, Gooey,
Thick, Tarry’ Oil
23
March, 2014
A
barge carrying 924,000 gallons of thick marine shipping oil collided
with a ship near the Texas City dike on Saturday afternoon, spilling
up to 168,000 gallons and forcing closures on the waterway.
“This
is an extremely serious spill,” Capt. Brian Penoyer of the U.S.
Coast Guard told the Houston Chronicle. “It is a persistent oil.”
The
barge was being towed from Texas City to Bolivar carrying a substance
called RMG 380, “a special bunker fuel oil often used in shipping
that doesn’t evaporate easily.” As of 10 p.m. Saturday, the spill
had not been contained and the Coast Guard was still investigating
the collision. Thus far, Texas City Emergency Management said the
dike and all parks on the water are closed until further notice and
part of the Houston ship channel was closed to traffic, according to
the Coast Guard.
The
Coast Guard “said officials were closely monitoring the spill area
for health-threatening hydrogen sulfide and other dangerous gases
that can be emitted by the spill,” the Houston Chronicle reported.
Dangerous concentrations of the gases have not been detected but two
of the six crew members on the tug were treated for exposure to
fumes, Texas City Homeland Security Director Bruce Clawson told the
Chronicle. Exposure to RMG 380 may cause respiratory tract, eye and
skin irritation and the “vapor may contain hydrogen sulfide (H2S)
gas which can be harmful or fatal if inhaled,” according to the
Material Safety Data Sheet.
“That
stuff is terrible to have to clean up,” Jim Suydam, spokesman for
the Texas General Land Office, told the Associated Press. Suydam
described the type of oil the barge was carrying as “sticky, gooey,
thick, tarry stuff.”
The
spill also threatens key bird habitat on both sides of the Houston
ship channel just as peak shorebird migration season approaches.
Richard Gibbons, conservation director with the Houston Audubon
Society, told ABC13 that the Bolivar Flats Shorebird Sanctuary just
to the east attracts 50,000 to 70,000 shorebirds to its shallow mud
flats. As the birds prepare for migration, Gibbons said “the timing
really couldn’t be much worse.”
Geoff
Roberts, who was out fishing Saturday, told ABC13 he “noticed a
layer of oil caked on” the side of his boat and on his fishing
reel. “They even told us don’t eat any fish you catch today,”
Roberts said.
Thousands
of feet of containment boom were placed around the partially
submerged barge Saturday night, as well as at the ecologically
critical Big Reef at the end of Galveston Island and Little Pelican
Island. Sunday, the Coast Guard and cleanup crews will work to assess
just how much of the oil leaked and where it moved overnight, and to
begin the process of transferring the oil that remains on the barge,
potentially hindered by overcast conditions and rain.
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