Ruptures in Peru’s main oil pipeline have spilled 3,000 barrels of crude in an Amazonian region, state-owned operator Petroperu said on Monday, and the oil has polluted two rivers native villages rely on for water, according to government officials.
Two breaks in the pipeline have halted transportation of 5,000 to 6,000 barrels of oil per day, state-owned Petroperu said.
The oil has poured into the Chiriaco and Morona rivers in northwestern Peru, the Agency for Environmental Assessment and Enforcement (OEFA) said.
At least eight native Achuar communities rely on the rivers for water, said Edwin Montenegro, a local indigenous leader.
The Peruvian Ministry of Health declared a water quality emergency in five districts near the spill.
Petroperu faces about 60 million soles (US$17 million) in fines if tests confirm that the spills, in late January and early February, hurt the health of locals, OEFA said.
It could take “some time” to resume operations, Petroperu president German Velasquez said.
Petroperu operates the pipeline and also refines the oil it transports, which had slowed in recent months to between 5,000 and 6,000 barrels per day amid slumping oil prices. The pipeline mostly transports crude from block 192, which is operated by Pacific Exploration & Production Corp.
Heavy rains upended Petroperu’s initial efforts to contain the damage as oil burst from retaining walls and spread into nearby rivers, Montenegro said.
TV images showed thickets of jungle sopped in black sludge and clean-up crews lifting buckets of crude from rivers.
Velasquez said a landslide likely triggered the first leak, but the cause of the second was unclear.
The spills come as Petroperu has been preparing to take part in oil production with a private partner after more than two decades of mostly refining and transporting crude. It had also planned to put up to 49 percent of its actions on the Lima stock exchange.
OEFA ordered Petroperu to replace parts of the pipeline and improve maintenance.
“It’s important to note that the spills ... are not isolated cases. Similar emergencies have emerged as a result of defects in sections of the pipeline,” OEFA said.
Velasquez said the company was conducting an evaluation of the pipeline, built in the 1970s, to prevent any future spills, a process that could take up to two months.
He denied reports the firm paid children to clean up the oil, but said he was evaluating firing four officials, including one who might have allowed children to collect the crude.
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