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Oil Spills and Disasters
The following list includes major oil spills since 1967. The circumstances surrounding the spill, amount of oil spilled, and the attendant environmental damage is also given.
- 1967
- March 18, Cornwall, Eng.: Torrey Canyon ran
aground, spilling 38 million gallons of crude oil off the Scilly
Islands.
- 1976
- Dec. 15, Buzzards Bay, Mass.: Argo Merchant
ran aground and broke apart southeast of Nantucket Island, spilling its
entire cargo of 7.7 million gallons of fuel oil.
- 1977
- April, North Sea: blowout of well in Ekofisk oil
field leaked 81 million gallons.
- 1978
- March 16, off Portsall, France: wrecked supertanker
Amoco Cadiz spilled 68 million gallons, causing widespread
environmental damage over 100 mi of Brittany coast.
- 1979
- June 3, Gulf of Mexico: exploratory oil well Ixtoc
1 blew out, spilling an estimated 140 million gallons of crude oil into
the open sea. Although it is one of the largest known oil spills, it had
a low environmental impact.
- July 19, Tobago: the Atlantic Empress and
the Aegean Captain collided, spilling 46 million gallons of
crude. While being towed, the Atlantic Empress spilled an
additional 41 million gallons off Barbados on Aug. 2.
- 1980
- March 30, Stavanger, Norway: floating hotel in
North Sea collapsed, killing 123 oil workers.
- 1983
- Feb. 4, Persian Gulf, Iran: Nowruz Field platform
spilled 80 million gallons of oil.
- Aug. 6, Cape Town, South Africa: the Spanish tanker
Castillo de Bellver caught fire, spilling 78 million gallons of
oil off the coast.
- 1988
- July 6, North Sea off Scotland: 166 workers killed
in explosion and fire on Occidental Petroleum's Piper Alpha rig
in North Sea; 64 survivors. It is the world's worst offshore oil
disaster.
- Nov. 10, Saint John's, Newfoundland: Odyssey
spilled 43 million gallons of oil.
- 1989
- March 24, Prince William Sound, Alaska: tanker
Exxon Valdez hit an undersea reef and spilled 10 million–plus
gallons of oil into the water, causing the worst oil spill in U.S.
history.
- Dec. 19, off Las Palmas, the Canary Islands:
explosion in Iranian supertanker, the Kharg-5, caused 19 million
gallons of crude oil to spill into Atlantic Ocean about 400 mi north of
Las Palmas, forming a 100-square-mile oil slick.
- 1990
- June 8, off Galveston, Tex.: Mega Borg
released 5.1 million gallons of oil some 60 nautical miles
south-southeast of Galveston as a result of an explosion and subsequent
fire in the pump room.
- 1991
- Jan. 23–27, southern Kuwait: during the Persian
Gulf War, Iraq deliberately released 240–460 million gallons of crude
oil into the Persian Gulf from tankers 10 mi off Kuwait. Spill had
little military significance. On Jan. 27, U.S. warplanes bombed pipe
systems to stop the flow of oil.
- April 11, Genoa, Italy: Haven spilled 42
million gallons of oil in Genoa port.
- May 28, Angola: ABT Summer exploded and
leaked 15–78 million gallons of oil off the coast of Angola. It's not
clear how much sank or burned.
- 1992
- March 2, Fergana Valley, Uzbekistan: 88 million
gallons of oil spilled from an oil well.
- 1993
- Aug. 10, Tampa Bay, Fla.: three ships collided, the
barge Bouchard B155, the freighter Balsa 37, and the barge
Ocean 255. The Bouchard spilled an estimated 336,000
gallons of No. 6 fuel oil into Tampa Bay.
- 1994
- Sept. 8, Russia: dam built to contain oil burst and
spilled oil into Kolva River tributary. U.S. Energy Department estimated
spill at 2 million barrels. Russian state-owned oil company claimed
spill was only 102,000 barrels.
- 1996
- Feb. 15, off Welsh coast: supertanker Sea
Empress ran aground at port of Milford Haven, Wales, spewed out
70,000 tons of crude oil, and created a 25-mile slick.
- 1999
- Dec. 12, French Atlantic coast: Maltese-registered
tanker Erika broke apart and sank off Britanny, spilling 3
million gallons of heavy oil into the sea.
- 2000
- Jan. 18, off Rio de Janeiro: ruptured pipeline
owned by government oil company, Petrobras, spewed 343,200 gallons of
heavy oil into Guanabara Bay.
- Nov. 28, Mississippi River south of New Orleans:
oil tanker Westchester lost power and ran aground near Port
Sulphur, La., dumping 567,000 gallons of crude oil into lower
Mississippi. Spill was largest in U.S. waters since Exxon Valdez
disaster in March 1989.
- 2002
- Nov. 13, Spain: Prestige suffered a damaged
hull and was towed to sea and sank. Much of the 20 million gallons of
oil remains underwater.
- 2003
- July 28, Pakistan: The Tasman Spirit, a
tanker, ran aground near the Karachi port, and eventually cracked into
two pieces. One of its four oil tanks burst open, leaking 28,000 tons of
crude oil into the sea.
- 2004
- Dec. 7, Unalaska, Aleutian Islands, Alaska: A major
storm pushed the M/V Selendang Ayu up onto a rocky shore,
breaking it in two. 337,000 gallons of oil were released, most of which
was driven onto the shoreline of Makushin and Skan Bays.
- 2005
- Aug.-Sept., New Orleans, Louisiana: The Coast Guard
estimated that more than 7 million gallons of oil were spilled during
Hurricane Katrina from various sources, including pipelines, storage
tanks and industrial plants.
- 2006
- June 19, Calcasieu River, Louisiana: An estimated
71,000 barrels of waste oil were released from a tank at the CITGO
Refinery on the Calcasieu River during a violent rain storm.
- July 15, Beirut, Lebanon: The Israeli navy bombs
the Jieh coast power station, and between three million and ten million
gallons of oil leaks into the sea, affecting nearly 100 miles of
coastline. A coastal blockade, a result of the war, greatly hampers
outside clean-up efforts.
- August 11th, Guimaras island, The Philippines: A
tanker carrying 530,000 gallons of oil sinks off the coast of the
Philippines, putting the country's fishing and tourism industries at
great risk. The ship sinks in deep water, making it virtually
unrecoverable, and it continues to emit oil into the ocean as other
nations are called in to assist in the massive clean-up effort.
- 2007
- December 7, South Korea: Oil spill causes
environmental disaster, destroying beaches, coating birds and oysters
with oil, and driving away tourists with its stench. The Hebei
Spirit collides with a steel wire connecting a tug boat and barge
five miles off South Korea's west coast, spilling 2.8 million gallons of
crude oil. Seven thousand people are trying to clean up 12 miles of
oil-coated coast.
- 2008
- July 25, New Orleans, Louisiana: A 61-foot barge, carrying 419,000 gallons of heavy fuel, collides with a 600-foot tanker ship in the Mississippi River near New Orleans. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of fuel leak from the barge, causing a halt to all river traffic while cleanup efforts commence to limit the environmental fallout on local wildlife.
- 2009
- March 11, Queensland, Australia: During Cyclone Hamish, unsecured cargo aboard the container ship MV Pacific Adventurer came loose on deck and caused the release of 52,000 gallons of heavy fuel and 620 tons of ammonium nitrate, a fertilizer, into the Coral Sea. About 60 km of the Sunshine Coast was covered in oil, prompting the closure of half the area's beaches.
- 2010
- Jan. 23, Port Arthur, Texas: The oil tanker Eagle Otome and a barge collide in the Sabine-Neches Waterway, causing the release of about 462,000 gallons of crude oil. Environmental damage was minimal as about 46,000 gallons were recovered and 175,000 gallons were dispersed or evaporated, according to the U.S. Coast Guard.
- April 24, Gulf of Mexico: The Deepwater Horizon, a semi-submersible drilling rig, sank on April 22, after an April 20th explosion on the vessel. Eleven people died in the blast. When the rig sank, the riser—the 5,000-foot-long pipe that connects the wellhead to the rig—became detached and began leaking oil. In addition, U.S. Coast Guard investigators discovered a leak in the wellhead itself. As much as 60,000 barrels of oil per day were leaking into the water, threatening wildlife along the Louisiana Coast. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano declared it a "spill of national significance." BP (British Petroleum), which leased the Deepwater Horizon, is responsible for the cleanup, but the U.S. Navy supplied the company with resources to help contain the slick. Oil reached the Louisiana shore on April 30, affected about 125 miles of coast. By early June, oil had also reached Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi. It is the largest oil spill in U.S. history.
Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson
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