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- <text id=94TT1515>
- <title>
- Nov. 07, 1994: Environment:The Rivers Ran Black
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 07, 1994 Mad as Hell
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 68
- The Rivers Ran Black
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A huge oil spill fouls Russia's far north, raising specters
- of Alaska's Exxon Valdez disaster
- </p>
- <p>By Michael D. Lemonick--Reported by Sally B. Donnelly/Kolva, Terence Nelan/Moscow and
- Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> No one would ever accuse the former Soviet republics of going
- overboard on environmental protection. But even by their low
- standards, the news that began trickling out of Russia last
- week was appalling. A ruptured pipeline in the northwestern
- Komi republic has dumped a huge amount of oil onto the Arctic
- landscape, contaminating wetlands and fouling waterways. An
- eyewitness reported that on one river the crude has formed a
- noxious slick measuring six to seven miles long, 14 yards wide
- and a yard deep. The spill's total volume, say U.S. Department
- of Energy officials, could be as much as 2 million bbl., some
- eight times the amount dumped in Alaska by the Exxon Valdez.
- </p>
- <p> Or maybe not. The Russians insist that the real figure is only
- a one-twentieth as large, and no one has been able to prove
- them wrong. Bad weather closed area airports for most of last
- week, while a persistent cloud cover prevented orbiting spy
- satellites from photographing the spill. But even if the Russian
- estimates are accurate, says William White, the U.S. Deputy
- Secretary of Energy, "that's a lot of oil."
- </p>
- <p> In either case, the environmental damage could be devastating.
- Says Warner Chabot, an official with the Washington-based Center
- for Marine Conservation: "If the oil enters the Pechora River
- and flows into the Barents Sea, it will destroy wetlands, salmon
- runs and breeding grounds for shorebirds." Conditions in the
- Arctic are so harsh that plants and animals already live on
- the edge of survival. It can take decades for a tree to grow
- just a few feet, and tire tracks in tundra vegetation may persist
- for up to 100 years.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the volume of escaped petroleum, the spill is just
- part of a much bigger problem. Russia has more than a million
- miles of gas and oil pipelines, many of them poorly maintained
- and some in very bad shape. Every year, up to a fifth of Russia's
- total oil production is lost--partly to theft, but much of
- it through leakage. Komineft, the company whose oil is now polluting
- the northern terrain, is one of the most consistent offenders.
- For six years, says Stephen MacSerraigh of the oil industry
- magazine Nefte Compass, "the Komineft pipelines have averaged
- about 10 leaks a month. If you fly over them, you constantly
- see puddles of oil on the ground."
- </p>
- <p> The pipeline that ruptured was evidently the worst of a bad
- bunch. "It was corroded and had holes all over it," says Mikhail
- Bernstein, an executive at a construction firm that was hired
- last August to replace the 19-year-old conduit. Local officials
- don't disagree. "We all know the pipeline should have been repaired,"
- said Vyacheslav Bibikov, Vice President of the Komi republic,
- in a testy meeting with reporters last week. "There's no money
- for it." Rather than stop the flow of oil and lose income, Komineft
- erected earthworks to contain the gathering crude. When the
- autumn rains came, the makeshift dikes crumbled, and the oil
- escaped.
- </p>
- <p> News of the spill was contained much more effectively than the
- oil. It wasn't until weeks later, when an American oil-company
- worker was brought in to consult on the cleanup, that the rest
- of the world learned what had happened. The U.S., Germany and
- Denmark have offered to help, but by week's end the Russians
- had not responded. To hear Bibikov talk, they won't have to.
- He claims that the oil fouled only a few miles of the nearby
- Kolva River and that the water has been 90% cleaned up. The
- remaining oil, he says, covers less than 50 acres of swampland.
- Most factory workers in the area were deployed with shovels
- to try to scoop up the mess. When the ground freezes for the
- winter, the Russians will be able to bring in heavy equipment
- to finish the job.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the information coming out of Komi is suspect. A local
- civilian defense official asserted firmly, for example, that
- "not one bird, not one animal has died" from the oil. That's
- highly implausible, even if it were possible to know such a
- thing. Bibikov insists the Pechora River was unaffected. Yet
- a spokesman for Greenpeace in Moscow says fishermen almost 300
- miles downriver on the Pechora reported large amounts of oil
- in their nets last week.
- </p>
- <p> Local villagers interviewed by TIME said they have suffered
- for years from the effects of petroleum pollution. "The river
- used to have lots of fish," said Vyacheslava Topova, who lives
- in Kolva, a river town in the region. "Now there are hardly
- any fish at all, and when we cook them, they smell bad. People
- here survive, but they are really worried about the future."
- This spill may be cleaned up by spring, as Bibikov insists.
- But unless Russia overhauls its aging, corroding pipelines,
- they will keep springing leaks and spoiling the landscape.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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