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Environment
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Offshore oil spill threatens beaches in eastern Thailand as Navy rushes to help with clean-up operation

  • The spill leaked from an undersea pipeline near Rayong province, which belongs to Star Petroleum Refining
  • The Thai Navy has sent a surveillance plane, two ships and a helicopter to help with the clean-up, but some of it could hit the area’s shores

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Oil spill leaked from an undersea pipeline belongs to Star Petroleum. Photo: Reuters
Associated Press

Thailand’s navy was helping Wednesday to clean up a spill of as much as 128 tons (160,000 litres) of crude oil that leaked from a pipeline in the Gulf of Thailand.

The spill is near an industrial site but some of the oil could hit the area’s beaches by Friday if it’s not dispersed before then, said Attapol Charoenchansa, director general of the Pollution Control Department of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment.

The Star Petroleum Refining Public Company said the leak occurred at about 9pm local time Tuesday at a mooring station about 20 kilometres (12 miles) southeast of the Map Ta Phut Industrial Estate, south of Bangkok. It was stopped soon after midnight.

Thai Navy Spokesman Vice Admiral Pokkrong Monthatphalin said in a text message that the navy sent a surveillance plane, two ships and a helicopter to help with the clean-up. He said the helicopter would survey the area and spray a chemical to help disperse the oil slick.

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Star Petroleum estimated 20 tons (about 20,000 litres) of oil was floating on the surface. It began work to remove the oil overnight and expected to remove all of it. It was unclear exactly how much oil had spilled in total, it said.

“We received good support from relevant government agencies and the private sector, including manpower, working boats and dispersant supplies to support the operation to complete clean the oil from the sea’s surface,” a company statement said.

Samples of oil collected from a large oil spill off the coast of Rayong, eastern Thailand. Photo: AP
Samples of oil collected from a large oil spill off the coast of Rayong, eastern Thailand. Photo: AP

Thailand has had a number of oil large spills over the past two decades. The government’s Marine Department defines major oil spill disasters as anything over 20,000 litres leaked into the sea.

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