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- It's been nearly 30 years since the Exxon Valdez oil spill. But that crisis pales in comparison to these recent ocean disasters.
It's been nearly 30 years since the Exxon Valdez oil spill. But that crisis pales in comparison to these recent ocean disasters.
When the topic of environmental disasters comes up, many Americans quickly think of the Exxon Valdez spill.
March 24, 2019 marks the 30-year anniversary of the disaster. Much of the oil that spilled in 1989 still lingers in the area.
According to National Geographic, scientists sampled water in the Gulf of Alaska in 2014, and found that it still contains many of the same chemical compounds that the spilled oil did. This suggests the effects still linger.
The spill blackened 1,300 miles of Alaskan coastline.
According to the ITOPF, the disaster was the most expensive oil spill in history. Clean-up alone cost some $2.5 billion.
But the cause of the spill — and the extent of the destruction it wrought on local wildlife — is still unclear.
The night of the accident, the Exxon Valdez encountered icebergs in the shipping lane it was traversing. The captain ordered the helmsman to divert the tanker out of the shipping lane, and gave his third mate instructions to turn the tanker back into the lane at a later point.
But according to the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council, the third mate and helmsman failed to turn the tanker back into the shipping lanes. The reasons for this remain unclear, but the mistake led the Exxon Valdez to run aground on Bligh Reef.
The first major oil spill ever occurred two years before Exxon Valdez, off the coast of Cornwall, England in 1967.
The supertanker Torrey Canyon ran aground and spilled up to 36 million gallons.
Soldiers from the UK Hampshire Regiment reportedly hosed detergent into the sea in an effort to remove the oil.
At that time, the Torrey Canyon was the largest vessel ever wrecked in the ocean.
Two decades after the Exxon Valdez disaster, the US saw another devastating oil spill.
The Gulf oil spill, sometimes referred to as the Deepwater Horizon disaster or BP oil spill, caused some 200 million gallons of oil to leak into the Gulf of Mexico between April and July 2010.
The Gulf oil spill leaked 19 times more oil than the Exxon Valdez disaster.
The amount of oil that leaked into the Gulf of Mexico was equivalent to 311 Olympic-sized swimming pools, according to Popular Mechanics.
Only 25% of the leaked oil was recovered, leaving more than 154 million gallons in the ocean.
The spill likely harmed or killed some 82,000 birds, 6,100 sea turtles, and 25,900 marine mammals, including bottlenose dolphins and sperm whales, according to the Center for Biological Diversity.
The pollution from the disaster caused fishing closures across 88,500 square miles.
The spill also harmed an unknown number of fish, including Atlantic bluefin tuna, Gulf sturgeon, smalltooth sawfish, and dwarf seahorses, the Center for Biological Diversity reported.
It wasn't the first big oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. In 1979, Mexico experienced a "Deepwater Horizon" of its own, when the Ixtoc oil well exploded and sank.
Ten months after the June 3, 1979 accident, the oil well had dumped more than 126 million gallons of oil into the ocean, according to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute.
The previous year, the Amoco Cadiz tanker dumped more than 65 million gallons of oil into the English Channel off the coast of Brittany, France.
In 1992, Amoco agreed to pay $200 million in damages.
The Amoco Cadiz didn't run aground like the Rena or Exxon Valdez. Instead, the ship had put out a distress call, saying it was no longer able to maneuver. Then it broke into two pieces.
Two weeks after the accident, millions of dead mollusks, sea urchins and other marine species washed ashore, the ITOPF reported.
When the oil tanker Haven exploded in April 1991, the resulting fire swept through the ship, killing five crew members.
Three days later it sank, carrying 41 million gallons of oil into the ocean depths west of Genoa, Italy.
Luckily, only 6 million gallons of that 41 million leaked into the ocean.
The tanker was also owned by Amoco, which is now a part of BP.
Oil from the Haven spill made it all the way to the French Riviera.
For years after the disaster, fisheries along the French and Italian coast suffered severe environmental damage from pollution.
In 2000, a pipeline at a state-owned oil refinery in Brazil leaked almost 350,000 gallons of crude oil into the Guanabara Bay. Local animals paid a heavy price.
The spill devastated nearby swamps, mangrove ecosystems, and important breeding grounds for fish, birds and crustaceans.
New Zealand experienced its worst-ever maritime environmental disaster in 2011, when the vessel Rena struck the Astrolabe Reef near Fiji.
That spill dumped 93,000 gallons of oil into the Pacific Ocean.
But an even more recent and devastating oil spill occurred last year in the East China Sea.
The Iranian oil tanker Sanchi collided with a cargo ship and caught fire.
The Sanchi spill leaked more than 32 million gallons of ultra-light crude oil, which is extremely flammable and highly toxic if inhaled.
The Sierra Club called the disaster "the worst oil spill in decades."
Oil is toxic to fish in high quantities, and can also accumulate in their body tissue and be passed up the food web.
That's why fisheries typically close due to health concerns following a big oil spill.
Sea turtles are also particularly vulnerable to oil spills.
When the turtles raise their heads above the water's surface to breathe, they can inhale oil into their lungs, or gulp it down their throats. Mother turtles can even pass oil compounds on to their developing eggs.
For sea birds, oil that sticks to their feathers can lead them to lose their ability to maintain a steady body temperature, which means they could freeze to death.
If the birds ingest any oil via their food or water, they could die or lose the ability to reproduce.
But tanker oil spills aren't the only way humans have wreaked havoc on the oceans.
During the Gulf War, Iraqi troops tried to use oil as a weapon against invading American forces.
The troops set hundreds of oil wells on fire, devastating the surrounding environment. According to Time, "the Gulf was awash in poisonous smoke, soot and ash. Black rain fell. Lakes of oil were created."
What's more, Iraqi forces also dumped millions of gallons of oil into the Persian Gulf to hinder US troops from landing on the beaches.
And oil isn't the only pollutant humans have dumped into water systems, either.
For 35 years, from 1932 to 1968, a Japanese fertilizer company called the Chisso Corporation dumped industrial wastewater into Minamata Bay that was contaminated with an estimated 30 tons of poisonous methylmercury.
Dogs, cats, pigs, and humans were poisoned by the contaminated fish. The effects of the mercury lasted for years after that dumping stopped.
The toxic chemical accumulated in local fish and shellfish, which Japanese citizens consumed. This led them to suffer from a condition called Minamata disease, which wreaks havoc on the brain and nervous system and causes physical deformities.
Humans have also been putting an unprecedented amount of plastic into the ocean.
The largest accumulation of ocean plastic in the world is called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch and is located between Hawaii and California.
These floating plastic garbage patches threaten marine life and humans, too.
Animals sometimes confuse the plastic for food and consume it. This can lead to behavioral changes, strangulation, and death.
There's also the issue of polluted run-off water that enters the ocean from other waterways. In the Gulf of Mexico, that run-off has created a "dead zone" for marine life.
Dead zones are areas of ocean that are hypoxic — meaning severely lacking in oxygen. It's extremely difficult, if not impossible, for marine life to survive.
The Gulf dead zone starts at the mouth of the Mississippi River, covering up to 7,000 square miles.
Regardless of the toxic substance — whether it's oil, chemicals, or trash — cleaning up pollution in water isn't an easy task. These efforts can take decades and cost billions.
Most likely, spilled oil will never be completely be eradicated from the ocean.
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