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- <text id=91TT0323>
- <link 91TT0547>
- <link 91TT0272>
- <title>
- Feb. 11, 1991: Dead Sea In The Making
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991 Highlights
- The Persian Gulf War:Desert Storm
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 11, 1991 Saddam's Weird War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 40
- ENVIRONMENT
- Dead Sea in the Making
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A fragile ecosystem brimming with life is headed for destruction
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL D. LEMONICK -- Reported by Ted Gup/Washington and
- Lara Marlowe/Dhahran
- </p>
- <p> Another full-fledged war began last week, complete with its
- own heavy weapons, intelligence reports and international team
- of experts on strategy and tactics. This one was against an
- enemy no less redoubtable than Saddam's army: an oil slick
- estimated at 80 km (50 miles) long and 19 km (12 miles) wide
- that is breaking into pieces as it spreads down the Persian
- Gulf, its consistency like that of melted chocolate.
- </p>
- <p> An estimated 1.1 billion liters (294 million gal.) of crude
- oil had escaped from Kuwait's Sea Island terminal before allied
- bombing raids on pumps feeding the facility reduced the torrent
- to a trickle. That makes the spill by far the largest ever, not
- 12 times the size of the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster, as
- originally thought, but 27 times as large. And that does not
- include oil that began gushing last week from a second spill
- farther north. The magnitude of the mess is such that "it can't
- be cleaned up," says Jim Rhodes, of ABASCO, a maker of cleanup
- equipment based in Houston.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam Hussein may have engineered the spill to foil any
- allied plans for an amphibious invasion, but he was also
- probably trying to shut down seaside desalination plants that
- provide much of the fresh water for Saudi Arabia's Eastern
- province. Another target may have been Saudi power stations and
- oil refineries, which rely on seawater for cooling. Saddam's
- action will not prevent an invasion, says the Pentagon, but
- temporary shutdowns of plants and refineries seem inevitable.
- </p>
- <p> The danger is vastly greater, though, for the billions of
- creatures that inhabit the Persian Gulf. The gulf waters,
- shores and islands are dotted with coral reefs, mangrove swamps
- and beds of sea grass and algae, brimming with birds, sea
- turtles, fish and marine mammals. This complex ecosystem,
- already pushed to the limits of survival by years of pollution,
- is now threatened with total collapse by the inexorable spread
- of the smothering, toxic oil.
- </p>
- <p> Early on, experts might have blunted the slick's destructive
- power by burning off some of the oil, using chemical
- dispersants to break it up and removing more with
- surface-skimming devices deployed from boats. But the best they
- could hope for in a war zone was to protect a few key spots.
- "We learned in the Exxon Valdez cleanup that you can't control
- the oil but you can exclude it from a small area," says Randy
- Bayliss, a consultant involved in the Alaskan effort.
- </p>
- <p> Workers last week began placing miles of plastic booms
- around the desalination facilities. Because petroleum generally
- floats on water, such booms, which extend up to 1 m (3 ft.)
- below the surface, can contain a slick. The next step is to put
- skimming equipment inside the booms and begin scooping up the
- oil, either with vacuuming devices or by drawing oil-absorbent
- plastic ropes through it and wringing them out. Some of the
- crude can be salvaged as kerosene.
- </p>
- <p> Such techniques work best during the early days of a spill,
- before the crude begins to separate. Unfortunately, by the time
- a U.S. oil-spill assessment team arrived on the scene, the more
- volatile components of the oil had evaporated, leaving heavier
- chemicals that were whipped by waves into a thick water-oil
- "mousse" or turned into tar balls, which sink.
- </p>
- <p> The spilled Kuwaiti oil is relatively light, so the
- separation process occurs quickly. The resulting small globules
- can more easily infiltrate the desalination plants' intake
- pipes, 5 m (16 ft.) below the surface. Even tiny amounts of oil
- would affect the smell and taste of the water, and greater
- amounts could damage the desalination equipment.
- </p>
- <p> The plants will therefore probably be shut at the first hint
- of contamination, an event that would be likely to trigger
- severe water rationing. The Jubail plant alone provides 80% of
- Riyadh's drinking water, while the Azziziyah plant in al-Khobar
- serves half a million residents of the Eastern province.
- Transporting desalinated water from the Red Sea or digging new
- wells and converting brackish groundwater to sweet water would
- be time-consuming alternatives.
- </p>
- <p> There was little hope that the oil would stay offshore. For
- most of last week winds and currents drove the slick into Saudi
- coastal waters at a rate of 16 km (10 miles) a day. Though
- strong winds from the south intervened over the weekend to push
- the oil away, granting the Saudis a few more days to mount
- defenses against it, the slick was expected to reach Jubail
- sometime this week. From there it is expected to move on to the
- shore of the heavily populated Dhahran-al-Khobar area.
- </p>
- <p> Ecologists say this particular stretch of the planet is
- extraordinarily sensitive to upheaval. The water is very salty,
- and temperatures vary widely from one season to another. As a
- result, indigenous animals and plants are finely attuned to
- specialized conditions. The Persian Gulf is also isolated, with
- only one narrow outlet -- the Strait of Hormuz, just 55 km (34
- miles) across. "It takes three to five years for the water to
- be flushed out," says Abdul Aziz Abu Zinada, Secretary General
- of the Saudi National Commission for Wildlife Conservation and
- Development. By contrast, Prince William Sound, site of the
- Exxon Valdez accident, is cleansed every 28 days.
- </p>
- <p> The gulf differs from the sound in other ways as well. It
- averages only 35 m (110 ft.) deep -- about one-third the depth
- of the sound, so there is less water to dilute the oil. The
- gently sloping shoreline provides flat beds for mangroves and
- sea grass. Also, "the fetch of the waves is not high," says
- John Grainger, a British scientist working with the NCWCD, "so
- wave action is not very cleansing."
- </p>
- <p> Much of the gulf's rich sea life is dependent on mud flats,
- many of which lie right in the oil slick's path. They are home
- to hordes of snails that feed on algae. Young fish eat the
- debris produced by the roots of mangroves, which grow in the
- mud, while nearby sea-grass beds serve as shrimp nurseries.
- Says Grainger: "The algal stretches, coral reefs and sea grass
- are the major driving forces of the gulf ecosystem."
- </p>
- <p> Coral reefs, which teem with sea life, will probably die
- back as much as 3 m (10 ft.) below the surface. "It could be
- tens of years if not centuries before some of the reefs come
- back," says Roger McManus, president of the Center for Marine
- Conservation. Many of the creatures within the reefs --
- starfish, shrimp, lobsters, urchins, sea snakes and a variety
- of fish -- would also be sacrificed.
- </p>
- <p> Birds, including terns, sandpipers, curlews, ducks and
- cormorants, will be among the most immediate and visible
- victims of the spill. Their plumage becomes coated with oil,
- depriving them of the ability to regulate their body
- temperature. Hundreds of Saudis in the Jubail area have
- volunteered to wash the oil off birds. But even if some birds
- are cleaned, many will die from eating contaminated mollusks
- and worms in the mud flats.
- </p>
- <p> Commercially important fish such as tuna, mackerel and
- sardines are threatened as well, as are hawksbill and green
- turtles. Sea mammals are also vulnerable, including dolphins,
- whales and dugongs, an endangered species similar to Florida's
- manatees. Only about 7,000 of these docile, 1.5-ton vegetarians
- are in the gulf, one of the world's largest populations.
- </p>
- <p> Nature has a way of confounding even experts' predictions.
- After all, Prince William Sound recovered from the Exxon Valdez
- disaster more quickly than expected. But no one has ever seen
- a spill of this size, and no one can say that "eco-terrorism"
- in the gulf is over. The Iraqis could, in the words of an
- American engineer, let "rivers of oil run into the sea." Saudi
- and U.S. forces would try to stop that, but it may already be
- too late to prevent the teeming gulf from becoming a dead sea.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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