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Oil spill from power station spreads along Syria’s coast

Above, smoke billows from a tanker off the coast of the western Syrian city of Baniyas in May 2021 after an attack blamed on Israel. Syria is heavily reliant on imported fuel as most of its resources are outside of government control. (SANA/AFP)
Above, smoke billows from a tanker off the coast of the western Syrian city of Baniyas in May 2021 after an attack blamed on Israel. Syria is heavily reliant on imported fuel as most of its resources are outside of government control. (SANA/AFP)
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30 Aug 2021 05:08:03 GMT9
30 Aug 2021 05:08:03 GMT9
  • Satellite images show what appears to be a massive oil spill stretching out over 25.5 square kilometers

DAMASCUS: A massive oil spill caused by leakage from a power plant inside one of Syria’s oil refineries is spreading along the coast of the Mediterranean country, Syria’s state news agency said and satellite photos showed Wednesday.

SANA said the spill reached the coastal town of Jableh, about 20 kilometers north of the refinery in the town of Baniyas, adding that Syria’s environment department and the municipality of the coastal province of Latakia have placed all concerned departments on alert. It said work is underway to clean the coast in the rocky areas.

A day earlier, Syria’s government said that maintenance teams at Baniyas Thermal Station had brought a fuel leakage from one of the tanks under control.
Satellite images from Planet Labs Inc. on Wednesday showed what appeared to be a massive oil spill stretching out over 25.5 square kilometers. An image from Monday showed no sign of the slick, suggesting whatever happened to cause the spill happened later.

The head of the Electricity Workers Syndicate at Tartous Workers Union, Dawoud Darwish, blamed cracks in one of the fuel tanks at the thermal station.

He pointed out that the tank was filled with 15,000 tons of fuel.

Syria’s oil resources are mostly outside of government controlled areas but its two refineries are under government control and operating. This makes Damascus reliant on Iran for fuel, but US Treasury sanctions have hindered the supply network, which spans Syria, Iran and Russia.

There has been a series of mysterious attacks on vessels in Mideast waters, including off Syria’s coast, for over a year. They have come amid rising tensions in the region between Iran, Israel and the United States.

In May, Syria’s foreign minister blamed Israel for mysterious attacks targeting oil tankers heading to Syria, saying they violate international law and will not go unpunished.

AP

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