Black Sea coast facing 'ecological catastrophe'

RUSSIA: Long stretches of Russia's Black Sea coast face an ecological catastrophe, local authorities said yesterday, after a…

RUSSIA:Long stretches of Russia's Black Sea coast face an ecological catastrophe, local authorities said yesterday, after a fierce storm broke up a tanker, disgorging hundreds of tonnes of oil on to the shore.

Three seamen were drowned. A search was under way for five others missing, though hopes of finding them alive were dwindling.

Spilt fuel oil coated birds in a thick black sludge along a vast expanse of coastline in the northern mouth of the Black Sea, near Russia's border with Ukraine.

Russian president Vladimir Putin sent prime minister Viktor Zubkov to the scene to oversee the clean-up.

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"The damage is so huge it can hardly be evaluated. It can be compared to an ecological catastrophe," Interfax news agency quoted Alexander Tkachyov, governor of Russia's Black Sea region of Krasnodar, as saying.

"Thirty thousand birds have died, and it's just impossible to count the loss of fish," he told regional officials.

The storm on Sunday sank the tanker and at least four freighters while crippling other vessels in the narrow Kerch Strait between the Black Sea and Azov Sea.

Rescuers yesterday found the bodies of three sailors missing since the storm.

Environmentalists, backed by Ukraine's prime minister Viktor Yanukovich, said the incident raised questions about safety standards for shipping in the region.

Russian officials said the captains of several vessels had put to sea despite storm warnings. The tanker that was the source of the spill, the Volgoneft-139, was built in the 1970s, and was not designed for heavy seas, officials said.

Officials said it had released at least 1,300 tonnes of fuel oil into the sea, though environmental group Greenpeace said it estimated up to 2,000 tonnes were spilled.

At the coastal settlement of Ilyich, halfway between Kavkaz and Novorossiisk, about 100 workers were on the beach using shovels and a bulldozer to scrape globules of oil off the sand.