New York, Feb 7 : A barge carrying 80,000 gallons of oil hit a railroad bridge in
Vicksburg, Miss., spilling light crude into the Mississippi River and closing
the waterway for eight miles in each direction, the Coast Guard said. A second
barge was damaged.
Investigators did not know how much had spilled, but
an oily sheen was reported as far as three miles downriver of Vicksburg after
the 1:12 a.m. incident, said Lt. Ryan Gomez of the Coast Guard's office in
Memphis, Tenn.
Authorities were still trying to determine the source of
the leak, but it appeared to be coming from one or two tanks located at the
stern of the first barge, Gomez said. He said there was no indication that any
oil was leaking from the second vessel, and said it was still unclear whether
the second barge also hit the bridge or was damaged through a collision with the
first.
"Investigators are still trying to figure out what happened," he
said.
United States Environmental Services, a response-and-remediation
company, was working to contain the oil with booms before collecting it and
transferring it to one of the barge's undamaged tanks, then ultimately to a
separate barge, Gomez said. He could not say how long the river would remain
closed in the area. Five northbound and two southbound vessels were waiting to
pass, he said.
"It's still considered an active leak," Gomez said. "We
don't have an estimate or accurate amount of what was released."
Railroad
traffic was allowed to continue after the bridge was found safe for trains,
Petty Officer Carlos Vega said.
The barges are owned by Third Coast
Towing LLC, Gomez said. According to a website listed under that name, the
company is located in Corpus Christi, Texas. No one answered the telephone at
the company.
Both vessels were being pushed by the tugboat Nature's Way
Endeavor. The website for Nature's Way Marine LLC of Theodore, Ala., identifies
the vessel as a 3,000-horsepower, 90-foot-long boat, making it the largest and
highest-powered of the company's five tugs. It was built in 1974 and underwent a
complete rebuild in 2011, according to the company.
A company manager
referred calls to the Coast Guard command center at Vicksburg.
The last
time an oil spill closed a portion of the lower Mississippi River, it was for
less than a day last February after an oil barge and a construction barge
collided, spilling less than 10,000 gallons of oil. In 2008, a fuel barge
collided with a tanker and broke in half, dumping 283,000 gallons of heavy crude
into the waterway, and closing the river for six days.
The oil sheen from
the incident was unlikely to pose a threat to the Gulf of Mexico, located 344
river miles south of Vicksburg.
Residents and businesses in Gulf Coast
states are still recovering from the April 2010 explosion of the Deepwater
Horizon drilling rig, which killed 11 workers and spewed more than 200 million
gallons of oil into the Gulf.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Barge with 80,000 gallons oil hits bridge, leaks
Barge with 80,000 gallons oil hits bridge, leaks
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