An oil slick extending more than 125 miles appeared
in the Red Sea, satellite images show, a fresh environmental
disaster in a waterway where commercial ships are under siege from attacks by Yemen’s Houthi
militants.
The slick extends from about 60 miles northwest of
the Yemeni city of Hodeidah and continues northbound, the pictures show.
It appears in images from the Sentinel 2
satellite that were taken on July 16 and wasn’t previously present on July 14.
It wasn’t clear which vessel caused the spill, or
whether it was a direct result of a Houthi attack, but multiple ships have been targeted in the region in recent days, including one — the Chios Lion — with a sea drone. That carrier was investigating a possible oil
spill, the UK Navy said Tuesday 16 July.
The Chios Lion collected
90,000 tons, about 600,000 barrels, of fuel oil from Russia’s Black Sea port of
Novorossiysk on July 2 and was heading to China, according to shipping
information compiled by Bloomberg. Most
seagoing merchant ships also use fuel oil for power.
Stealth Maritime, the
vessel’s manager, said a small amount of damage was caused to the vessel and
the crew is unharmed. The firm declined to comment on whether oil is spilling
from the tanker.
The Houthis have been
attacking vessels in the Red Sea for months in protest at Israel’s war with
Hamas.
Although many ships
are avoiding the area, instead sailing thousands of miles around Africa, some
continue to run the gauntlet. Attacks ramped up last month, which was the most
active so far this year, culminating in the sinking of a second ship with a sea
drone.
Earlier in the year when the Houthis sank a vessel
called the Rubymar there
was a fertilizer spill. Other ships have been damaged and either continued to their
destinations or awaited salvage by specialists.
Based on the shape of the spill, its color and the
way it is spreading on the surface of the sea, it is likely fuel oil, according
to Wim Zwijnenburg, a project leader at Netherlands-based PAX, who’s spent 10 years
studying satellite images to identify the environmental impacts that conflicts
cause.
Surface winds are
pushing the slick to the south, and two large gyres in the surface currents are
making the slick very convoluted, according to John Amos, CEO of the
investigative nonprofit SkyTruth.