Emergency declared in Crimea as oil spill reaches Sevastopol
The alert follows fuel oil spilling out of two storm-stricken tankers nearly three weeks ago in the Kerch Strait.
Officials in Moscow-occupied Crimea have announced a regional emergency after oil was detected on the shores of Sevastopol, the peninsula’s largest city.
Fuel oil spilled out of two storm-stricken tankers nearly three weeks ago in the Kerch Strait, close to eastern Crimea – some 155 miles from Sevastopol, which lies on the south-west of the peninsula.
“Today, a regional emergency regime has been declared in Sevastopol,” regional governor Mikhail Razvozhaev wrote on Telegram.
Oil was found on four beaches in the region and was “promptly eliminated” by local authorities working together with volunteers, Mr Razvozhaev said.
“Let me emphasise: there is no mass pollution of the coastline in Sevastopol,” he wrote.
Krasnodar regional governor Veniamin Kondratyev said on Friday that more than 5,000 people were still working to clean up the spill.
More than 86,000 tonnes of contaminated sand and soil have been removed along the region’s shoreline since the original spill, he wrote on Telegram.
On December 23, the ministry estimated that up to 200,000 tonnes in total may have been contaminated with mazut, a heavy, low-quality oil product.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has called the oil spill an “ecological disaster”.
It has also been a key point of conflict between Russia and Ukraine after Moscow annexed the peninsula in 2014.
In 2016, Ukraine took Moscow to the Permanent Court of Arbitration, where it accused Russia of trying to seize control of the area illegally. In 2021, Russia closed the strait for several months.
Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to the head of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s office, described the oil spill last month as a “large-scale environmental disaster” and called for additional sanctions on Russian tankers.