A vessel of
unidentified origins has capsized near the Cove Eco-Industrial Park in Tobago,
causing a massive oil spill. Officials on the Caribbean Island are trying their best to clean and
contain the spill and investigating the mysterious ship that caused this
environmental disaster. Oil has
contaminated the southwestern part of the Island of Tobago and may spread
further.
The government has classified it as a
Tier II disaster, with the Tobago Emergency Management Agency, Environmental
Management Authority and government agencies working together to contain it. They have put protective booms in place,
and efforts to contain the spill continued till late night. The incident
happened on Wednesday, February 7, when the authorities received news of a
capsized ship. No distress call had been received, and the search party could
not find any crew members. They saw oil that was beginning to reach the
shoreline.
Divers examined the vessel and reported
its visual identity as Gulfstream; however, they could not retrieve its
registration number mentioned on the stern as it was blocked by the oil. Additionally, the vessel’s visible name
does not correspond with any of the international ship registries.
Per estimates, the vessel was 100 m long
and carried sand and lumber. A nearby reef was also reportedly damaged, and a
part of the vessel’s superstructure is missing. Plans to search for debris are
underway amidst speculations that it might have been abandoned and left to
float.
The vessel seems to have drifted into the
cove from the south. Some said that they had seen it as early as Tuesday 6 Feb.
Many people are also helping clean up,
and officials have asked the public to avoid southwest Tobago. For now, the
biggest concern is the harm caused to the region’s marine ecosystem by this oil
spill