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Singapore oil clean up to take 3 months before beaches gradually reopen

  • More than 700 cleaning personnel have been deployed and much of the oil on beachfronts has been cleaned up, the environment minister said

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A member of the clean-up crew handles oil-coated sand along Tanjong Beach on Singapore’s Sentosa Island on June 15. Photo: Bloomberg
CNA
Oil spill clean-up operations are expected to take around three months before affected areas such as beaches are progressively reopened to the public, Singapore’s Minister for Sustainability and the Environment Grace Fu said.

She gave an update on the clean-up operation during a joint press conference on Monday with Transport Minister Chee Hong Tat and Minister for National Development Desmond Lee.

The spill occurred on the afternoon of June 14 after a Netherlands-flagged dredger hit a stationary bunker vessel, causing oil from the latter’s damaged cargo tank to spill into the water.

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Over the next few days, oil washed up along several beaches including Sentosa, East Coast Park, and Labrador Nature Reserve, as well as beaches at St John’s, Lazarus and Kusu islands. Oil slicks were also spotted at Marina South Pier.

Fu said that more than 700 cleaning personnel have been deployed and much of the oil on beachfronts has been cleaned up.

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“About 550 tonnes of oil-soaked sand and debris from the affected beaches has been removed,” she added.

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