Bangladesh launches campaign to clean up Sunderbans oil spill

“At least 200 hired workers in nearly 100 engine and country boats have started a campaign to collect the oil from rivers and channels”

December 13, 2014 05:51 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 04:52 pm IST - Dhaka

In this December 12, 2014 photo, oil slick line the banks of the Shela River after an oil tanker sank in one of the world's largest mangrove forests, threatening wildlife in the UNESCO World Heritage site of the Sundarbans in Bangladesh.

In this December 12, 2014 photo, oil slick line the banks of the Shela River after an oil tanker sank in one of the world's largest mangrove forests, threatening wildlife in the UNESCO World Heritage site of the Sundarbans in Bangladesh.

Bangladesh launched an intensified manual campaign to clean up seepage following a huge oil spill in 34,000 hectares at the Sunderbans that threatened the world’s largest mangrove forest.

The manual cleanup campaign came as authorities on India’s eastern coast are on alert with Additional Director of Sundarban Biosphere Reserve Pradeep Vyas saying “We are taking all precautionary measures”.

Officials and witnesses said the forest department engaged nearly 100 boats to collect the furnace oil spilled from the tanker which sank in the Shela river in the Sundarbans after being hit by a cargo vessel on Tuesday.

“At least 200 hired workers in nearly 100 engine and country boats have started a campaign to collect the oil from rivers and channels,” a local resident told PTI over phone. “The workers were loading the boats with the oil they were collecting manually using the traditional equipment and depositing those in tanks in nearby ferry terminals.”

“The oil collection will continue until further notice,” a forest official told a TV channel from the scene.

Forest official Amir Hossain Chowdhury said they were expected to reach a decision on the modus operandi of the oil clean up by later today.

Director-General of Environment Department Mohammad Shahjahan told the media that they had sent the specimen of the chemicals for analysis to their own laboratory and the testing facilities of the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET).

“But we are yet to get their reports and suggestions. So until now we cannot give permission for its use in the Sundarbans,” he said.

The authorities earlier had asked local people to collect the furnace oil using fishing nets, sponges or any other manual means and sell it to the state-run Padma Oil Company.

The seepage spread in the Shela and the Pashur rivers and over 20 canals which crisscross the Sundarbans in the past four days while officials found four out of six chambers of the tanker carrying 358,000 litres oil damaged

Seven members of the sunken tanker’s crew managed to swim ashore, but their captain Mokhlesur Rahman was missing till Friday evening.

The authorities have filed a lawsuit against the owners of both ships.

Bangladesh is yet to seek any overseas assistance to remove the oil but Shipping Minister Shahjahan Khan on Friday told BBC radio that a London-based team officered its assistance for the cleanup.

Officials said oil spill from the sunken tanker affected seven young saltwater crocodiles at Karamjal Wildlife Reproduction Centre and they were concerned about the fate of dolphins in the region it is their natural abode.

The Sundarbans is the world largest mangrove forest, which covers 26,000 square km in India and Bangladesh, is also the habitat of famous Royal Bengal Tigers.

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