Aussie beaches a 'disaster zone' after toxic spill

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Aussie beaches a 'disaster zone' after toxic spill

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SYDNEY (AFP) - Dozens of popular tourist beaches on Australia's northeast coast were on Friday declared a disaster zone, with their once-pristine sands fouled by a massive oil and chemical slick.

Queensland state's marine safety authority said up to 100 tonnes of fuel were now believed to have spilled from the Hong Kong-flagged ship Pacific Adventurer amid cyclonic conditions early on Wednesday.
Moreton and Bribie Islands, and parts of the popular Sunshine Coast, were declared disaster zones.
"This may well be the worst environmental disaster we have seen in southeast Queensland," the state's leader, Anna Bligh, said.
Initial estimates put the spill at 30 tonnes but authority spokesman John Watkinson said up to 100,000 litres could be washing up along a 60-kilometre (40-mile) stretch of the region's beaches, sickening local wildlife.
The ship's owners, Swire Shipping, said they had sent a diver to inspect the hull late on Friday.
"This shows that the damage suffered as a result of Cyclone Hamish is greater than initially understood and it is likely that substantially more oil has spilled than the earlier estimate of 42.5 cubic metres," Swire said in a statement.
Swire faces 1.5 million dollars (977,000 US dollars) in fines if found guilty of environmental or maritime breaches
"The company very much regrets the environmental impact caused as a consequence of the vessel being caught in Cyclone Hamish," it said.
"The company and its insurers will meet all their responsibilities."
Swire had to launch a separate clean-up effort on Friday afternoon after leaking more oil into the river which runs through Brisbane, the state's capital city.
The "small" spill, contained by barriers surrounding the ship, took place during testing to determine how much oil was lost in the first leak, Swire said.
Describing it as a "potential environmental tragedy", Prime Minister Kevin Rudd pledged full government support for the clean-up effort, which could cost millions of dollars.
Officials warned the situation was likely to worsen, with sludge expected to wash ashore for weeks.
A team of 130 specialists was on Friday mopping up the mess and attempting to prevent it from spreading into nearby mangrove swamps and waterways.
The oil flooded Moreton Bay after wild seas whipped up by Cyclone Hamish toppled 31 containers of ammonium nitrate fertiliser from the ship's deck.
As they fell, the containers punctured the hull, before taking 620 tonnes of the explosive chemical to the ocean floor.
Experts fear the fertiliser, a nutrient-rich chemical, could cause harmful algal blooms, suffocate fish and kill natural habitats.
Moreton Bay, a marine sanctuary, is home to a range of sea birds and other creatures, including turtles, dolphins and pelicans.
A dozen sickened animals had been discovered, but the environmental protection authority said that was likely to rise.
"The flow-on effects of oil spills can be substantive," an authority spokesman said. "The longer-term impacts are yet to be realised."
 
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