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the prestige: an environmental tragedy

The environmental disaster arising from the sinking of the oil tanker, the Prestige, 260 kilometres from the Spanish Atlantic coast on November 19, 2002, has brought tragic consequences with unprecedented ecological and economic repercussions for the countries bordering the European Atlantic Coast.

galicia

  The Spanish Scientific Committee has calculated that more than 25,000 tons of fuel have already escaped from the Prestige, whilst a further 50,000 tons still remain trapped in the two sections of the ship, which are lying at a depth of 3,800 meters, separated by a distance of more than a kilometre. In spite of efforts to seal the leaks, a process that is both difficult and costly, an estimated 80 tons of fuel continue to escape every day from cracks in the hull. Now 500 kilometres of coastline have been directly affected and a similar area is suffering indirect consequences of the toxic oil spill.

As a consequence of the disaster, one of the most important areas for shellfish production in the world, an area famous for its rich fishing grounds, has been seriously damaged. The devastating effects of the unrefined oil spill have reached the wildlife Atlantic Islands National Park, an important point of call for thousands of migratory birds and valued by ornithologists as a unique and exceptionally well preserved ecosystem.

Friends of the Earth Galicia, a very active member group of FoE Spain, has severely criticised the inactivity of the European Union. Instead of learning a lesson from the disasters of the Exxon Valdez and Erika disasters, the European Union has continued to permit the use of single hulled oil tankers in the shipping lanes that pass close to the Galician coast, as well as allowing them to dock.

 

 

 

 

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According to the Spanish government, the Prestige catastrophe will cost 1,000,000,000 euros. Economically it is a tragic blow for Galicia, a region in which a large percentage of the population depend on the sea: fishing, shellfish harvesting or related industries like the marketing or processing of shellfish. The tourist industry will also be detrimentally affected. Galicia receives hundreds of thousands of tourists every year, who arrive to enjoy the beautiful coastal scenery as well as the famous gastronomic seafood delicacies of the region.


When the disaster happened, FoE Galicia immediately set up teams of volunteers to coordinate relief efforts. In the coastal city of Vigo, volunteers of FoE Galicia are working with the “Rescue Centres for Fauna” that have been established. They have donated, not only volunteers’ time, but also equipment, vehicles and their own personal economic resources. They have set up patrols in the coastal areas to collect birds affected by the oil spill and have created a First Aid Centre in Gondomar where the birds can be stabilised before passing to the “Rescue Centres”. Together with other NGOs, fishermen’s associations and town councils, FoE Galicia is coordinating the volunteers arriving from all over Spain and other countries to participate in the beach and rock cleaning activities. To date, more than a thousand volunteers have been helped by FoE Galicia to find lodgings, equipment and to learn how to work in the clean up of the toxic oil spill. Volunteers continue to arrive, sometimes for a weekend, sometimes devoting their entire holidays to help in the clean up. No one doubts that it is a job that will need to continue for many more months, since the fuel continues to escape from the sunken ship and wash up on the coast of Galicia on a daily basis.

The effects of the oil spill continue to spread and have recently reached, although to a lesser extent, the coasts of Cantabria, Asturias and the Basque country. Like many local groups, FoE Galicia has limited resources and does not receive much support from public administrations, although in spite of this they have continued to work ceaselessly. FoE Spain and its local groups are calling upon their members to support FoE Galicia and to raise funds to help their efforts to fight against this terrible environmental disaster, a tragedy whose effects will be with us for a long time.
 

Find out more about a Spanish NGO joint declaration concerning this disaster.

 


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