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Spain's Canary Islands battles slick after ferry accident

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AFP Madrid
Spanish coast guard crews worked Sunday to clean up a three-kilometre long diesel slick off the holiday island of Gran Canaria after a passenger ferry slammed into a pier.

The ferry carrying 140 passengers smashed into a breakwater late yesterday in the port of Las Palmas, the capital of Spain's Canary islands off the northwest coast of Africa.

Thirteen people were injured and the crash damaged underwater fuel pipes, the regional government said in a statement. Video footage on Spanish television showed chunks of concrete falling onto the port.

Emergency crews managed today to collect half of the roughly 60,000 litres of diesel that spilled into the ocean, the regional government said.
 

Three coast guard boats were today working to break up the slick -- which is three kilometres long and half a kilometre wide -- to help the diesel evaporate, it added.

"Work on the spill is continuing and we hope that it will have evaporated before Monday. Experts do not believe there is risk to the environment," Fernando Clavijo, the president of the regional government, said in a tweet.

Beaches around Las Palmas and Telde, the two main towns on Gran Canaria, would be closed on Sunday as a precaution, the regional government said.

Repairing the pier will cost around two million euros (USD 2.1 million) and take six months, it added.

Ferry operator Naviera Armas said the accident was caused by a technical fault that sparked a power cut on the boat.

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First Published: Apr 23 2017 | 4:57 PM IST

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