The Japan Times - Antwerp port reopens to North Sea shipping after oil spill

EUR -
AED 4.307401
AFN 75.064533
ALL 95.834061
AMD 440.685664
AOA 1075.529712
ARS 1610.383221
AUD 1.656515
AWG 2.112648
AZN 1.992571
BAM 1.957751
BBD 2.361453
BDT 144.043542
BHD 0.442347
BIF 3484.656569
BMD 1.172879
BND 1.493989
BOB 8.101106
BRL 5.895473
BSD 1.172468
BTN 108.754394
BWP 15.738805
BYN 3.365153
BYR 22988.424315
BZD 2.357768
CAD 1.621845
CDF 2697.621187
CHF 0.924791
CLF 0.026516
CLP 1043.580564
CNY 8.012931
CNH 8.001731
COP 4274.298723
CRC 542.64075
CUC 1.172879
CUP 31.081288
CVE 110.37499
CZK 24.370314
DJF 208.763117
DKK 7.472769
DOP 70.600354
DZD 155.043703
EGP 62.261219
ERN 17.593182
ETB 183.954656
FJD 2.589775
FKP 0.872554
GBP 0.871044
GEL 3.154875
GGP 0.872554
GHS 12.901316
GIP 0.872554
GMD 86.793039
GNF 10287.251403
GTQ 8.968938
GYD 245.265135
HKD 9.186162
HNL 31.139031
HRK 7.535045
HTG 153.733197
HUF 375.21585
IDR 20037.2267
ILS 3.55876
IMP 0.872554
INR 109.017383
IQD 1535.930578
IRR 1543508.490007
ISK 143.209393
JEP 0.872554
JMD 185.374729
JOD 0.831574
JPY 186.613816
KES 151.47708
KGS 102.568557
KHR 4693.116571
KMF 493.782113
KPW 1055.60662
KRW 1738.276994
KWD 0.362009
KYD 0.976957
KZT 553.995938
LAK 25852.676697
LBP 104985.888459
LKR 370.018729
LRD 215.70921
LSL 19.236469
LTL 3.463206
LVL 0.709463
LYD 7.453427
MAD 10.89776
MDL 20.198717
MGA 4865.267573
MKD 61.613943
MMK 2463.631282
MNT 4216.8939
MOP 9.457295
MRU 46.8637
MUR 54.562127
MVR 18.120702
MWK 2032.783057
MXN 20.275326
MYR 4.65048
MZN 75.005869
NAD 19.236469
NGN 1594.434662
NIO 43.142993
NOK 11.140531
NPR 174.00663
NZD 2.004426
OMR 0.45098
PAB 1.172328
PEN 3.957043
PGK 5.075057
PHP 70.234352
PKR 327.027288
PLN 4.244607
PYG 7582.556133
QAR 4.27446
RON 5.090652
RSD 117.367646
RUB 90.405788
RWF 1712.001684
SAR 4.401446
SBD 9.440012
SCR 16.181777
SDG 704.900061
SEK 10.84737
SGD 1.492705
SLE 28.840121
SOS 669.98768
SRD 43.923193
STD 24276.222953
STN 24.524439
SVC 10.259223
SYP 129.659553
SZL 19.238875
THB 37.593065
TJS 11.142874
TMT 4.11094
TND 3.426014
TRY 52.392507
TTD 7.956929
TWD 37.208417
TZS 3055.349847
UAH 50.940263
UGX 4338.323205
USD 1.172879
UYU 47.307142
UZS 14257.207525
VES 557.191728
VND 30888.935856
VUV 139.819445
WST 3.219503
XAF 656.532878
XAG 0.015384
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.169763
XCG 2.113106
XDR 0.818801
XOF 656.611323
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.789926
ZAR 19.227999
ZMK 10557.319294
ZMW 22.303564
ZWL 377.666492
  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.44

    +0.22%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • AZN

    -0.5100

    204.48

    -0.25%

  • GSK

    -0.0150

    58.345

    -0.03%

  • BTI

    -0.1850

    58.665

    -0.32%

  • BCE

    -0.2400

    23.65

    -1.01%

  • NGG

    0.3600

    90.68

    +0.4%

  • BP

    0.5550

    46.455

    +1.19%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    22.54

    -0.22%

  • RELX

    -0.2050

    33.135

    -0.62%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    17

    -1.18%

  • BCC

    -0.6600

    79.92

    -0.83%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    13.06

    +0.61%

  • VOD

    -0.0450

    15.805

    -0.28%

  • RIO

    1.1900

    98.32

    +1.21%

Antwerp port reopens to North Sea shipping after oil spill

Antwerp port reopens to North Sea shipping after oil spill

Belgium's Antwerp port said Friday that it had reopened to North Sea shipping after an oil spill brought traffic to a near-halt in Europe's second-largest port.

Text size:

The overnight spill occurred during a "bunkering operation" -- the process of filling a ship with fuel -- in the Deurganck Dock, used by some of the largest vessels in the world to load and unload goods in Antwerp.

The accident badly disrupted shipping as authorities raced to contain the risks of pollution and economic damage.

By early Friday afternoon the port said its main maritime access route via the Scheldt estuary had "been reopened to shipping" but that Deurdanck Dock "remains closed until further notice".

"Specialised vessels are actively engaged in cleaning up the oil," said a port statement, while working to "fully clear" the dock as well as several container terminals and locks affected by the spill.

"We are making every effort to safely and swiftly resume operations at these key locations and to minimise and resolve disruptions," Antwerp port said.

Belgian media reported that several dozen container and cargo ships had been affected by the traffic shutdown.

The port said that the source of the spill had been stopped, but that pollution had spread towards the Scheldt river with civil protection and maritime and coastal services closely monitoring the "potential impact on riverbanks and surrounding nature areas".

"The focus is on preventing further spread and on targeted clean-up of vulnerable zones," its latest statement said.

There was no official word on the scale of the spill, but local media VRT said the oil slick had spread over at least three kilometres -- almost two miles.

Local media reported that the spill occurred during the refuelling of the container ship MSC Denmark VI.

The ship's operator, MSC, confirmed the vessel was involved in the incident but declined to provide additional information.

"Our priority is safety," a spokeswoman for the company's Belgian office told AFP, adding that they were focused on safeguarding "the crew, the terminal, the nature".

- Key gateway -

The tidal Scheldt river estuary is the main maritime access route to Antwerp port, along with several narrower canals primarily used for inland navigation.

The port said it was "doing everything possible to minimise both operational and ecological damage".

The Pieter Coecke, a Belgian-flagged pollution control vessel, was operating in the area of the spill Friday, according to the Marine Traffic website.

Flemish environmental group Climaxi said ship refuelling operations were the main cause of oil spills in the region, often contaminating the local bird and amphibian populations.

The latest incident appeared to have impacted several natural reserves, including the Doelpolder wetlands, that are key bird breeding grounds, it said.

Larger than 22,000 football fields, Antwerp port is a key gateway for goods coming into Europe from the United States, China and elsewhere.

Europe's largest after Rotterdam in the Netherlands, the port handles transit each year of around 267 million tonnes of goods and is used by around 20,000 seagoing vessels and 50,000 inland vessels, according to its website.

K.Yamaguchi--JT