Australian navy to help spill clean up
A conservation officer looks out over the oil spill on the beach on Moreton Island near Brisbane, Australia, Friday, March 13, 2009. Nearly 40 miles of Australian beaches have been blackened by oil spilled from a cargo ship caught in stormy seas this week, leading the state premier to declare the area a disaster zone and warn that the ship's operators could face legal action. (AP Photo/Tertius Pickard)
BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — The Australian government sent a navy mine hunting ship to search Monday for hundreds of tons of chemicals lost overboard during a mishap that also blackened miles of beaches with fuel oil.
Authorities said they have scraped the slick off of more than half of the affected beaches just north of the
Authorities declared a disaster zone Friday along 37 miles (60 kilo meters) of some of
The spill happened when 31 containers lashed to the ship's deck broke free during a storm and fell overboard, ripping a hole in a fuel tank as they pitched into the sea.
Each of the containers held some 22 tons (20 tonnes) of ammonium nitrate, a chemical used as fertilizer that can also be explosive if mixed with diesel and detonated.
Authorities say ammonium nitrate dilutes easily in water and that at worst the spilled containers could cause an algal bloom. Still, they should be located and recovered as soon as possible, Environment Minister Peter Garrett said.
"We will deploy a Royal Australian Navy mine hunter vessel to search for (the) 31 fertilizer containers that were lost from the Pacific Adventurer during topical Cyclone Hamish on 11 March," Garrett told Parliament on Monday.
Queensland Deputy Premier Paul Lucas said Sunday an estimated 66,000 gallons (250,000 liters) of oil spilled from the ship.
Maritime Safety Queensland said authorities served the captain of the Pacific Adventurer legal papers on Sunday ordering him to remain on the ship until the investigation is complete. The captain's passport was handed to the authorities pending an investigation.
Swire says it is cooperating with authorities. The company has said it regretted the incident and the company and its insurers were talking with the government about cleanup costs.
Hundreds of workers toiled through the weekend to scoop up black, sludgy sand on Moreton and Bribie islands just north of the state capital of
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