Black smoke is billowing from East China Sea site where a burning Iranian oil tanker sank, Japanese authorities has said.
This development has triggered worries about damage to the marine ecosystem from the worst oil ship disaster in decades.
The blazing vessel, which was carrying 136,000 tonnes – almost one million barrels – of condensate, an ultra-light, highly flammable crude oil, sank on Sunday evening after several explosions weakened the hull.
The tanker Sanchi (IMO:9356608) had been adrift and ablaze after crashing into the freighter CF Crystal (IMO:9497050) on Jan. 6.
Strong winds had pushed it away from the Chinese coast, where the incident happened, and into Japan’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).
China’s State Oceanic Administration said on Sunday that a large amount of oil in surrounding waters was on fire because the explosions had ruptured the hull of the ship.
The sinking marks the biggest tanker spill since 1991, when 260,000 tonnes of oil leaked off the Angolan coast.
Japan’s coast guard has sent two patrol boats and an airplane to the area to search for missing crew members and assess the situation, a spokesman for the Japan Coast Guard said on Monday on telephone.
The Japanese authorities lost track of the tanker as of 0840 GMT on Sunday, the spokesman said.
The ship’s last confirmed location was about 315 km (195 miles) west of Sokkozaki on the island of Amami Oshima.
Amami Oshima is one of the northern islands in the Ryukyu island chain that includes Okinawa.
A Chinese salvage team on Saturday recovered two bodies from the tanker, China’s state news agency, Xinhua, reported.
Another body, presumed to be one of the Sanchi’s sailors, was found on Jan. 8 and brought to Shanghai for identification.
The salvage team recovered the Sanchi’s voyage data recorder or “black box” from the bridge of the tanker, Xinhua also said on Saturday.
The team was, however, forced to leave the ship after just half an hour because the wind shifted and “thick toxic smoke” had complicated the operation.
Iranian officials said on Sunday that the remaining 29 crew members and passengers of the tanker were presumed dead.
The crew consisted of 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis.
Experts are worried that the ship’s sinking is potentially more damaging to the marine ecosystem than letting the condensate oil burn off.
The sinking will likely expel the remaining condensate and the tanker’s bunker fuel, or the heavy fuel oil that powers a ship’s engines, contaminating the surrounding waters.
Bunker fuel is the dirtiest kind of oil, extremely toxic when spilled, though less explosive. Condensate is poisonous to marine organisms.
A harmful plume of condensate would likely be in the water, out of sight of observers on the surface, said Rick Steiner, a U.S. marine scientist based in Anchorage, Alaska, who has experience of oil spills.
“As with all major oil spills, time is of the essence. This is particularly so with condensate spills, as the substance is toxic and volatile,” Steiner said in an emailed statement.
The East China Sea is known for its rich, although already polluted, marine ecosystem, with whales, porpoises, seabirds and fish,’’ he said.
Fuel oil is relatively easy to contain because volumes are lower and its viscosity means it is easier to extract from water, but even small volumes can harm marine life.
A Suezmax tanker can hold a maximum of 5,000 tonnes of bunker fuel. The Sanchi may have been carrying about 1,000 tonnes by the time it hit the grain freighter CF Crystal, according to bunker fuel traders’ estimates. (Reuters/NAN)