RECENT OIL SPILLS
On Oct 20, oil spill containment measures were activated after a leak from an oil pipeline belonging to major energy company Shell occurred.
Shell said that following the incident, about 30 to 40 metric tonnes of “slop” – a mixture of oil and water – had leaked into the sea.
Shell placed containment booms off the site of the leak and also deployed craft equipped with dispersants to clean up the oil sighted in the vicinity of the leak, said MPA.
“Most of the oil around Bukom has been cleaned up with only small patches of light sheens around Bukom island and Bukom Kechil remaining,” Shell had said.
Sheen is a thin layer of oil sitting on top of the water.
An advisory that prohibited swimming around East Coast and the Southern Islands was also lifted on Oct 25.
In June, another oil spill occurred after Netherlands-flagged dredger Vox Maxima hit Singapore-flagged bunker vessel Marine Honour at Pasir Panjang Terminal on Jun 14.
The Netherlands-flagged dredger experienced a sudden loss in engine and steering control before its allision with Marine Honour.
An allision refers to when a moving vessel hits a stationary object.
The allision ruptured one of Marine Honour’s oil cargo tanks, releasing about 400 tonnes of low-sulphur fuel into the sea.
Oil washed up along several beaches including at Sentosa Island and East Coast Park, as well as the shoreline at Labrador Nature Reserve causing these beaches to be closed for clean-up operations.
Clean-up operations that resulted from the oil spill involved 800 cleaning personnel and 2,300 volunteers and were completed ahead of schedule more than two months after the incident affected Sentosa and other beaches.