Environmental disaster

Published June 15, 2026 Updated June 15, 2026 06:12am

IT was a heartbreaking sight. A recent news report in these pages carried a picture of a sea turtle lying half buried in oil-contaminated sand somewhere along Gwadar’s coastline. A stretch of about 20 km on Gwadar’s west coast is now covered by a thick layer of toxic residue from an ocean oil spill, with officials warning that it poses a severe threat to the marine environment. Efforts are underway to clean the beach, but the dead sea turtle is evidence of the harrowing damage likely being caused by the disaster under the water. The local fishing industry will suffer, experts warn, as the slick suffocates marine life and contaminates their catch. It is unclear what caused the spill, but local officials believe it could be tied to the conflict in the Gulf, where rival powers have targeted ships as they attempt to wrest control over the Strait of Hormuz. “It is highly likely that strong winds from the west, coupled with sea currents, pushed the spilt oil towards the Makran coast,” a local official said.

There is much that can be done, starting with taking proactive measures to ensure that the spill does not spread beyond already affected areas, and to provide all necessary support and resources for local environmentalists attempting to clean the affected beach and contain the impact of this disaster. Crude oil is poison for the marine ecosystem and needs to be cleaned on an emergency basis. The state should not disregard it and must immediately seek help from international firms and environmental groups that specialise in ocean clean-up operations. The impact from oil spills can continue for generations as it contaminates the food chain and ends up disturbing the biology of ocean animals, disturbing their reproduction. This could affect the livelihood of local fisherman for years, if not decades, and thus needs to be treated with the seriousness it deserves.

Published in Dawn, June 15th, 2026

Opinion

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