BSS
  29 Jan 2022, 09:00

Peru government says oil spill twice as big as previously thought

 LIMA, Jan 29, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - The oil spill off the coast of Peru sparked
by a volcanic eruption thousands of miles away is twice as big as previously
reported, the government said Friday.

  The announcement came hours after a court banned four directors from the
Spanish oil company Repsol, which owns the refinery where the accident took
place, from leaving the country for 18 months.

  Environment Minister Ruben Ramirez told reporters the country has "a figure
so far of 11,900 barrels" dumped into the sea on January 15, instead of the
6,000 reported earlier.

  Repsol confirmed that the figure was higher, but gave a slightly lower
estimate than the minister.

  The spill, described as an "ecological disaster" by the Peruvian
government, happened when an Italian-flagged tanker, the Mare Doricum, was
unloading oil at the La Pampilla refinery, just off Peru's coast around 30
kilometers (19 miles) north of Lima.

  Repsol said the tanker was hit by freak waves triggered by a tsunami after
a massive volcanic eruption near Tonga, more than 10,000 kilometers away.

  The oil slick has been dragged by ocean currents about 140 kilometers north
of the refinery, prosecutors said, causing the death of an undetermined
number of fish and seabirds.

  In addition, it left hundreds of local fishermen unable to take their boats
out. They have staged protests against the Spanish company.

  Deputy Environment Minister Alfredo Mamani said that 4,225 barrels of oil
had been recovered from the sea and some 20 beaches, just over a third of the
total.

  For its part, Repsol said in a statement in Lima that "the amount of oil
spilled is 10,396 barrels and 35 percent of that has already been recovered."

  Earlier Friday, Judge Romualdo Aguedo granted the prosecution's request to
prevent the four executives, including Repsol Peru's Spanish president Jaime
Fernandez-Cuesta Luca de Tena, from leaving the country, as investigators
look into the catastrophic oil spill.

  Peru has demanded compensation from Repsol, and the energy giant faces a
potential $34.5 million fine, the Environment Ministry has said.

  The Mare Doricum is anchored with a ban on setting sail.

  Fernandez-Cuesta Luca de Tena is accused of being responsible for the crime
of "environmental pollution to the detriment of the state," with the three
other executives considered "accomplices."

  If found guilty, Repsol's president faces a potential prison sentence of
four to six years.

  In Madrid, the oil company pledged to "fully cooperate with any criminal
investigation, as we are already doing with the ongoing preliminary
investigation," Repsol said in an email to AFP.

  "Our main concern is cleaning up the environment. Repsol is putting all its
efforts into cleaning up as quickly as possible," the company added.