ILOILO CITY – No new oil slick has been sighted in the northeastern coastal town of Caluya in Antique province, the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG)-6 said during the first quarter meeting of the Western Visayas Regional Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (RDRRMC) here.
CLEANUP of debris from the M/T Princess Empress oil spill in Caluya town, Antique province continues. (EMB-6) The PCG-6 also reported that 75 percent of shorelines were affected by the oil slick from the sunken tanker M/T Princess Empress in the island-barangays of Alegria, Semirara, Sibolo, and Tinogbok in Caluya. So far, 2,915 sacks, 441 drums, 119 pails, and 111 one-ton bags of contaminated sand and debris have been collected. During the meeting, the provincial government of Antique reported that residents are still hauling remaining “sacks of contaminated sand and debris.” Target date for completion of cleanup operations is April 9. Inter-agency cleanup effort is ongoing. The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) has been distributing cash aid for affected residents. The M/T Princess Empress sank off the coast of Oriental Mindoro on Feb. 28.
CLEANUP of debris from the M/T Princess Empress oil spill in Caluya town, Antique province continues. (EMB-6) The PCG-6 also reported that 75 percent of shorelines were affected by the oil slick from the sunken tanker M/T Princess Empress in the island-barangays of Alegria, Semirara, Sibolo, and Tinogbok in Caluya. So far, 2,915 sacks, 441 drums, 119 pails, and 111 one-ton bags of contaminated sand and debris have been collected. During the meeting, the provincial government of Antique reported that residents are still hauling remaining “sacks of contaminated sand and debris.” Target date for completion of cleanup operations is April 9. Inter-agency cleanup effort is ongoing. The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) has been distributing cash aid for affected residents. The M/T Princess Empress sank off the coast of Oriental Mindoro on Feb. 28.