
Chennai oil spill: The oil spill has crossed Marina Beach and is moving to other beaches in the city.
Quick Take
Summary is AI generated, newsroom reviewed.
60 tonnes of sludge has been removed by hundreds of volunteers
Oil spill has crossed Marina Beach and is moving to other Chennai beaches
20 tonnes of thick oil spilled into Bay of Bengal after 2 ships collided
The oil spill, spread by strong winds and waves, has crossed the Marina Beach and is moving to other beaches in Chennai.
Over 20 tonnes of thick oil spilled into the Bay of Bengal when the ships collided near Chennai's Kamarajar Port, affecting the marine life and a 30-km stretch of shoreline.

Workers are collecting the slick from the Chennai oil spill into large vats.
Close to a thousand workers, including volunteers from engineering colleges and fishermen, are using their bare hands to clear the thick sludge that machines have failed to remove. Coast guard ships and choppers are spraying oil spill dispersants and neutralisers.
Half the oil has been cleared, officials said yesterday. Questions are being raised on whether precious time was lost because the port authorities denied any oil spill at first.

The oil spill near Chennai in Tamil Nadu has spawned a massive clean-up operation.
Environmentalists are worried because nearly half a dozen turtles have died in the polluted area.
Volunteers, many of them in orange jumpsuits, are seen lifting oil mixed with sand with their hands, without any protective gear, and collecting it in vats and bags.
Three much-hyped suction machines didn't work as they pumped out more water than sludge.

Chennai oil spill: Coast Guard and local volunteers removing black oil washed ashore.
Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world