The
Singapore-registered MV X-Press Pearl, carrying 1,486
containers, including 25 tonnes of nitric acid along with other
chemicals and cosmetics, was anchored off the port city of
Negombo when a fire erupted onboard after an explosion on May
20.
Flaming containers filled with chemicals tumbled into the sea
from the ship's deck as emergency crews sought to contain the
blaze over the ensuing two weeks.
The ship, which was only four months old, began to sink early on
Wednesday. A salvage crew tried to tow the vessel to deeper
water, away from the coast, but the attempt was abandoned after
the rear of the ship touched the sea bed.
Cargo ship carrying chemicals sinks off Sri Lanka after fire,
fouling rich fishing waters
The ship's operators, X-Press Feeders, said in a statement on
Thursday there were still no signs any of the 350 tonnes of a
fuel oil had leaked from the ship, and that much of the toxic
cargo had been incinerated in the fire.
"Salvors remain on scene to deal with any possible debris,
supported by the Sri Lankan Navy and the Indian Coast Guard, who
have oil spill response capabilities on standby," it said.
But photos from the country's coast guard showed a layer of
green film blanketing the ocean surrounding the vessel, and
billions of plastic pellets have already fouled surrounding
beaches and fishing grounds, forcing the government to ban
fishing along an 80-kilometre stretch of coast.
"From an environmental view it is Sri Lanka's worst ever
man-made disaster," said Charitha Pattiaratchi, a professor of
coastal oceanography at the University of Western Australia.
The university's modelling indicated the plastic pellets from
the ship - the raw material for shopping bags - would travel as
far as Indonesia, India and Somalia, he added.
The Sri Lankan government has said it would seek redress for the
incident.
"We hope to get compensation in accordance with local and
international law. We will never give up on that effort," the
ports and ports development minister, Rohitha Abeygunewardene,
told a news conference late on Wednesday.
"We will calculate the cost from the beginning of this incident
and claim compensation."
Singapore authorities said on Thursday they had started their
own investigation into the incident.
(Reporting by Waruna Karunatilake in Colombo and Alasdair Pal in
New Delhi; Editing by Gerry Doyle and Mark Heinrich)
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