MANILA — A huge oil spill shut down parts of the Philippine capital’s vital fishing industry Friday, jeopardizing the livelihoods of tens of thousands of people living along Manila Bay’s diesel-coated coast.
Dead fish floated on the water and some residents fell ill from the fumes, as authorities said an estimated 500,000 liters of oil cast a slick across 20-kilometres of the coastline.
“Many of our young and elderly residents are getting sick,” Marcos Solis, the captain of a fishing village near the worst of the oil spill, told AFP.
“The price of fish and shellfish has also collapsed. Even those who fish far out to sea are affected because the fish smell the oil and swim away.”
Authorities said the slick was caused by either a leak at an oil terminal on the bay or a ship that had unloaded diesel there.
Coastguard marine environmental protection chief Commodore Joel Garcia told reporters the slick stretched seaward about 15 kilometers from the shore, covering an area of 300 square kilometers (120 square miles).
“I cannot say that we have contained it because it has affected so wide an area,” Garcia told reporters.
The area described by the coastguard covers about 15 percent of the bay, the country’s busiest body of water in a region where about 30 million people live, according to government data.
Locals said they feared for the immediate future of the bay’s vibrant fish and shellfish industry, which feeds millions of people in the capital and surrounding areas.
“Fish and shellfish are floating up dead. It could be months before the shellfish industry is revived unless the water is cleaned up soon,” Jose Ricafrente, mayor of Rosario fishing town, told AFP.
He said 40,000 people dependent on the fishing and shellfish industry in the bay were temporarily without jobs.
Asis Perez, head of the government’s fisheries and aquatic resources bureau, also told AFP the oil spill was impacting a vital section of the region’s fishing industry.
“Each boat here would typically haul in 30-40 kilograms of fish a day, so definitely the impact is huge,” Perez told AFP by telephone as he toured the affected areas by boat.
Ricafrente said he had implemented an emergency “food-for-work” program, in which fishermen and their families would help in the clean-up in exchange for rice and canned goods with the local government.
The residents were collecting diesel from the water using bottles and other improvised scooping implements. – AFP