UN Aims to Remove Oil from Tanker in Red Sea

FILE - The FSO Safer oil tanker, is anchored in the Red Sea off the coast of Yemen's contested western province of Hodeida on July 15, 2023. (Photo by MOHAMMED HUWAIS / AFP)

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UN Effort Aims to Remove Oil from Tanker in the Red Sea

An international team is working to remove oil from a ship anchored in the Red Sea off the coast of Yemen.

The oil tanker, called the SOF Safer, has not been used for at least eight years. It contains over 1 million barrels of oil.

Experts say the ship is at risk of breaking up or exploding.

The Associated Press reported in 2020 that seawater entered the ship’s engine room and caused damage. The water also put the ship in danger of sinking.

For years, the United Nations and governments of nearby countries warned that an explosion or oil leak could disrupt shipping in the Middle East. The ship is close to the Yemeni ports of Hodeida and Ras Issa. Many ships travel from the Persian Gulf, past Yemen and through Egypt’s Suez Canal to get to the Mediterranean Sea.

The United Nations purchased another oil tanker so crews could move the oil from the Safer.

Technicians work on the deck of the replacement vessel as the transfer of oil from the decaying FSO Safer oil tanker began off Yemen July 25, 2023. (United Nations/David Gressly/Handout via REUTERS)

Antonio Guterres is the UN Secretary General. In a statement, he said the work is a “critical next step in avoiding an environmental and humanitarian catastrophe.”

The U.N. said the job will be done in less than three weeks.

The Safer was built in the 1970s and sold to the Yemeni government in the 1980s so it could move oil pumped from the fields in Marib.

The U.N. said a leak could have been worse than the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill, one of the largest ecological disasters.

When the oil is removed, the work will not be over, however. The Safer will be anchored to an underwater oil pipeline before it is taken away to a scrapyard.

David Gressly is the U.N. humanitarian official for Yemen. He said moving the oil will prevent a “worst-case scenario.” Guterres said, cleaning up an oil spill in Yemen could have cost “tens of billions of dollars.”

I’m Dan Friedell.

Dan Friedell adapted this story for Learning English based on a report by the Associated Press.

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Words in This Story

anchor –v. to connect a boat to something very heavy that rests on the ocean floor so it does not move

disrupt –v. to change from the usual order of business in a big way

critical –adj. extremely important

catastrophe –n. a very bad accident

ecological –adj. having to do with the environment and nature

scrapyard –n. a place where vehicles and machines are taken apart and the parts are broken down into basic materials

scenario –n. a situation that might happen but that has not become reality

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