Mon 14 Jul 2008 08:02

US bunker spill cleanup is completed


'Pre-booming' measures aid oil spill containment and cleanup operations.



A bunker spill near the U.S port of Kalama has caused approximately 10 gallons of fuel oil to spill into the Colombia River. Cleanup operations have now been completed.

The bulk carrier vessel Portland Bay was receiving fuel from a barge when the first tank overfilled, sending about 500 gallons of fuel oil to the carrier’s deck. The Department of Ecology (Ecology) and U.S. Coast Guard responded to the spill.

An Ecology fuel-transfer inspector was on board the vessel at the time of the spill. Most of the fuel oil was contained to the deck, but approximately 10 gallons spilled over the side and into the Columbia River.

The Portland Bay had booms in place when the spill occurred. Both the booms and absorbent pads were used together to contain most of the bunker fuel that overflowed during the fueling operation.

State regulations that went into effect in October 2007 require that when conditions are safe, and it is effective to do so, vessels need to deploy oil containment boom equipment before starting oil transfers over water at rates of 500 gallons per minute or more.

The new “pre-booming” requirements cover all types of petroleum and plant-based fuel products such as heavy fuel oils, crude oil, diesel and bio-diesel fuel.

“Our first priority is preventing spills from occurring, but pre-booming for oil transfers is our next line of defense,” said Diane Butorac, interim Spill Prevention Section Manager. “This is a textbook example of how these preventative measures protect our environment. Luckily, very little spilled overboard, and it was cleaned up more readily because it was contained by the boom. But in reality, this spill should never have happened in the first place.”

Crews removed the 500 gallons of heavy fuel oil on the deck by scooping it into 55-gallon barrels. When the cleanup was finished, the Portland Bay was back under way.

A joint Ecology-Coast Guard investigation into the spill indicates that a valve was not properly adjusted, allowing fuel to pour into an already-near capacity tank as well as an empty one. When the first tank finished filling, the overflow came up on the deck.

Spill responders from Ecology’s Vancouver Field Office believe most of the spilled fuel was recovered from the water.


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