Pipeline leak in west Russia could poses serious threat: ministry Moscow (AFP) Jul 31, 2006 A major pipeline delivering oil from Russia to its European neighbours ruptured at the weekend, posing a potentially serious environmental threat, the government said on Monday. "Taking account of the information the ministry has received from representatives of environmental NGOs (non-governmental organisations) in the Bryansk region, the consequences of this accident could lead to an ecological catastrophe," the ministry of natural resources said in a statement. The accident occurred on Saturday on a section of the Druzhba pipeline running through the province of Bryansk, near Russia's border with Belarus. "This was an accident of medium severity that has polluted a large part of the public forests," the ministry statement added. "Our experts at the site have said that more than 100 tonnes of oil leaked from the pipeline on Saturday," ministry spokesman Renat Guizatulin said. Oleg Mitval, a senior official in the ministry, told AFP an area covering "10,000 square metres" (12,000 square yards) could have been contaminated by the oil. Russian oil pipeline monopoly Transneft, which manages the Druzba pipeline, declined to comment on the leak other than to say on its website: "Forty eight cubic metres of oil (leaked and) polluted an area covering 340 square metres... The Yput river, four kilometres (2.5 miles) away, was not polluted." Mitval said local officials had attempted on Saturday to cover up the rupture in the pipeline. "There has been an attempt to hide the information on this leak on the part of the official organisations involved, which increases our concern about the risk to the environment," Mitval, deputy director of the ministry's environmental monitoring service, told AFP. The Bryansk regional office of the emergency situations ministry sought on Monday to minimise the incident. "We are not talking about an ecological catastrophe here," office spokeswoman Irina Yegorushkina told AFP. The leak wasthe result of a crack in a joint,in a section of the pipeline that had been in service for 42 years, she said. It happened two kilometres (1.25 miles) from the village of Krasnaya Sloboda, in a section of the pipeline running from Unechka in Bryansk province to the nothern Belarussian city of Polotsk, officials said. Separately, Lithuanian Economy Minister Vytas Navickas saidon Monday that a technical problem had halted the flow of crude oil from Russia to Lithuania's Mazeikiu Nafta refinery. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Related Links Dirt, rocks and all the stuff we stand on firmly
Schwarzenegger criticises Bush over tackling climate change Long Beach, California (AFP) Jul 31, 2006 California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger on Monday criticised ineffectual US government policy on climate change, as he and British Prime Minister Tony Blair vowed to tackle the problem together. |
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