The Prague Post - Thai fishing crews fear five-year recovery after oil spill

EUR -
AED 4.36594
AFN 77.870471
ALL 96.2942
AMD 448.00317
ANG 2.128084
AOA 1090.14848
ARS 1669.103772
AUD 1.680193
AWG 2.142849
AZN 2.015722
BAM 1.952352
BBD 2.393363
BDT 145.363287
BGN 1.99647
BHD 0.448151
BIF 3521.95058
BMD 1.188821
BND 1.504431
BOB 8.211395
BRL 6.179608
BSD 1.188296
BTN 107.584552
BWP 15.589076
BYN 3.413756
BYR 23300.882446
BZD 2.389869
CAD 1.611244
CDF 2627.293384
CHF 0.913662
CLF 0.025762
CLP 1017.226287
CNY 8.21576
CNH 8.218935
COP 4357.585999
CRC 588.056541
CUC 1.188821
CUP 31.503744
CVE 110.069228
CZK 24.247422
DJF 211.276978
DKK 7.471107
DOP 74.477845
DZD 153.858833
EGP 55.626818
ERN 17.832308
ETB 184.68267
FJD 2.606013
FKP 0.869885
GBP 0.871964
GEL 3.197545
GGP 0.869885
GHS 13.076741
GIP 0.869885
GMD 87.385995
GNF 10431.402564
GTQ 9.112792
GYD 248.60782
HKD 9.294377
HNL 31.500881
HRK 7.533433
HTG 155.872106
HUF 378.200718
IDR 19954.352646
ILS 3.664824
IMP 0.869885
INR 107.693409
IQD 1557.949308
IRR 50079.065138
ISK 145.000165
JEP 0.869885
JMD 185.92088
JOD 0.84289
JPY 183.604994
KES 153.167675
KGS 103.962633
KHR 4790.947271
KMF 492.646231
KPW 1069.942109
KRW 1731.957017
KWD 0.364979
KYD 0.990239
KZT 584.630162
LAK 25529.921467
LBP 106639.837522
LKR 367.686024
LRD 221.863649
LSL 18.973147
LTL 3.510278
LVL 0.719106
LYD 7.489167
MAD 10.838497
MDL 20.11123
MGA 5273.607276
MKD 61.635436
MMK 2496.698373
MNT 4244.713672
MOP 9.568581
MRU 47.4267
MUR 54.304788
MVR 18.367741
MWK 2063.792242
MXN 20.445574
MYR 4.666157
MZN 75.964928
NAD 18.974021
NGN 1608.771149
NIO 43.653826
NOK 11.319902
NPR 172.136006
NZD 1.967944
OMR 0.457101
PAB 1.188286
PEN 3.99147
PGK 5.094071
PHP 69.553119
PKR 332.572218
PLN 4.219689
PYG 7821.187717
QAR 4.328793
RON 5.092197
RSD 117.332027
RUB 92.054162
RWF 1728.545055
SAR 4.45907
SBD 9.579692
SCR 16.351468
SDG 715.081428
SEK 10.574998
SGD 1.504219
SHP 0.891923
SLE 28.947812
SLL 24928.971294
SOS 679.40879
SRD 45.044296
STD 24606.184813
STN 24.846349
SVC 10.397507
SYP 13147.849721
SZL 18.972971
THB 37.150401
TJS 11.151965
TMT 4.17276
TND 3.383436
TOP 2.862394
TRY 51.866572
TTD 8.059665
TWD 37.464018
TZS 3061.213058
UAH 51.17752
UGX 4224.486219
USD 1.188821
UYU 45.56895
UZS 14628.436854
VES 457.44674
VND 30772.619495
VUV 142.421369
WST 3.226093
XAF 654.800617
XAG 0.014603
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.212847
XCG 2.141591
XDR 0.814362
XOF 654.445397
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.325627
ZAR 18.954281
ZMK 10700.810912
ZMW 22.606981
ZWL 382.799727
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.5300

    17.41

    +3.04%

  • CMSC

    0.1070

    23.692

    +0.45%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    58.82

    -0.32%

  • AZN

    5.3900

    193.4

    +2.79%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    25.83

    +0.81%

  • RIO

    0.3900

    97.24

    +0.4%

  • BTI

    -0.9600

    60.19

    -1.59%

  • NGG

    0.3700

    88.76

    +0.42%

  • BP

    -2.2500

    36.97

    -6.09%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    15.25

    -1.51%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    29.29

    -0.65%

  • BCC

    0.7100

    89.73

    +0.79%

  • CMSD

    0.1100

    24.08

    +0.46%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.78

    -0.23%

Thai fishing crews fear five-year recovery after oil spill
Thai fishing crews fear five-year recovery after oil spill

Thai fishing crews fear five-year recovery after oil spill

The nightly armada of bobbing green lights from squid boats has all but disappeared near the site of an oil spill in the Gulf of Thailand, as devastated local crews brace for lost income and damaged fish stocks.

Text size:

The Thai navy is scrambling to clean up Tuesday night's spill from a pipeline that leaked at least 60 tonnes of crude oil 20 kilometres (12 miles) off the coast of Rayong province.

Authorities have declared Mae Ram Phueng Beach a disaster zone and closed it to swimmers as crews in yellow plastic protective suits begin the clean-up.

Rayong resorts and seafood restaurants say the spill is a "nail in the coffin" for their businesses after the tourism industry's continued pandemic downturn.

For long-time fishermen who have been asked to halt their catches for at least a month in exchange for emergency payments, there is a feeling of deja vu.

They recall the long road to environmental and economic recovery after another pipeline leak in the same area in 2013.

Initial compensation for that accident was around $900, but fisherman Tuem 46, says it is no substitute for regular work.

"I don't want compensation. I want a healthy sea that I can work in for my livelihood," he told AFP.

"The sea can give us money every day. The sea was good in the past few years. I do not know how many years before it becomes good again."

- Five-year recovery -

Tuem usually makes around $30 a day from a 7-10 kilogram (15-22 pound) haul but he says now he will struggle to cover the cost of petrol to retrieve his fishing nets.

"The impact is immediate and clear. I do not know what to do," he said.

AFP joined a group of fisherman on a boat trip Sunday -- their fishing haul amounted to about 10 percent of their usual catch and many fish were dead.

Burapha University marine scientist Thanomsak Boonphakdee, who was taking water samples at the beach over the weekend, says it will take a long time to fully assess environmental damage from the disaster.

The marine life took at least five years to recover from the 2013 incident, he said.

"Crabs, small fish and shrimp are the (creatures) that will be affected most," he told AFP.

A dozen ships are spraying dispersant chemicals and so far more than 80,000 litres (21,000 US gallons) has been doused over the affected area.

Star Petroleum Refining Public Company Limited, the operator of the pipeline and whose major shareholder is US giant Chevron, said it was trying to minimise the slick's ecological impact using booms.

But satellite imagery shows the slick had already spread to an area of 51 square kilometres (20 square miles) on Sunday, local media reported.

There are also fears a national park on the island of Ko Samet will be affected and Thai authorities Sunday deployed absorbent material to Ao Prao beach as a precaution.

- Transparency calls -

Natural Resources and Environment Minister Varawut Silpa-archa urged oil companies in Thailand to ramp up prevention measures and boost inspections and maintenance programs on land and sea.

"I do not want this kind of accident to happen again. The expense of spending money to solve a major disaster after it happened, can not compare with companies increasing the inspections," he told reporters in Rayong.

Greenpeace, which has called on the Thai government to set up an independent investigation into the spill, said incidents are becoming far too common.

Between 1974 and present day there have been 240 oil spill incidents in Thailand, the environmental group said.

"The oil spill will affect marine life and could be fatal for fish, shrimps, shellfish," Greenpeace warned.

Another fisherwoman, Nid, 62, lamented it was heartbreaking to see another disaster after seeing the area's recovery in recent years.

"We are just small insects who have no voice to be heard," she told AFP.

E.Soukup--TPP