Malaysia tackles tanker oil spill
[KUALA LUMPUR] Malaysia is using chemical dispersants to break up an oil slick off its coast after a tanker laden with marine diesel sank last week, a top official said Tuesday.
The MT Putri Sea, registered in Malabo, Equatorial Guinea, went down on Thursday in a busy shipping lane off the southern state of Johor, near Singapore.
Authorities said all six Indonesian crew were missing and feared dead.
Two marine department boats were using chemical dispersants on the more than three kilometre-wide (two-mile) slick, Zulkifili Abu Bakar, director-general of the Maritime Enforcement Agency, said in a statement.
The oil spill is close to Petronas' billion dollar refinery and petrochemicals integrated development project in Pengerang.
Mr Zulkifili said the spill had not affected shipping activities and that the affected area was not a fishing zone.
Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar, natural resources and environment minister said a "tier one" response has been initiated to fight the oil spill.
"Measures are being put in place to ensure the oil slick does not reach land," he said in a separate statement.
Tier one is regarded as a minor oil spill that can be resolved within days.
AFP
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
Putin plans to meet Xi in China days after his new term starts
Biden vetoes bid to repeal US labour board rule on contract, franchise workers
Economic leaders of South Korea, Japan, China say FX volatility is a risk
US automakers win extension on use of Chinese graphite in EV tax credits
US service sector contracts in April; price pressures up
Thaksin’s daughter calls central bank independence an ‘obstacle’