Russia charges plant director in Arctic diesel fuel spill
CGTN
Photo released by European Space Agency captured on May 31, 2020 by the Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission shows the extent of the oil spill, in red, near a power plant in the Siberian city of Norilsk, 2,900 kilometers northeast of Moscow. Russian President Vladimir Putin has declared a state of emergency. /AP

Photo released by European Space Agency captured on May 31, 2020 by the Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission shows the extent of the oil spill, in red, near a power plant in the Siberian city of Norilsk, 2,900 kilometers northeast of Moscow. Russian President Vladimir Putin has declared a state of emergency. /AP

Russian authorities have charged the director of the Arctic power plant that leaked 20,000 tons of diesel fuel into the ecologically fragile region violating environmental regulations, a crime that could bring five years in prison.

Investigative Committee spokeswoman Svetlana Petrenko announced the charge against Vyacheslav Starostin on Monday and said an investigation into the May 29 leak is ongoing. Much of the spilled fuel fouled waterways in the Norilsk region and there is concern it could affect wildlife or make its way into the Arctic Ocean.

Russian Emergency Situations Ministry trucks work at the scene of an oil spill at a power plant in an outlying section of the city of Norilsk on June 3, 2020. /AP

Russian Emergency Situations Ministry trucks work at the scene of an oil spill at a power plant in an outlying section of the city of Norilsk on June 3, 2020. /AP

The fuel leaked when a storage tank collapsed. Prosecutors say that melting permafrost likely caused the collapse.

Workers laid booms to block the fuel's spread in the Ambarnaya River, a tributary of Lake Pyasino which in turn feeds a river that flows into the Kara Sea arm of the Arctic.

The head of Russia's natural resources agency Rosprirodnadzor, Svetlana Radionova, has denied that any fuel has reached the lake.

But a regional inspector for the agency, Vasily Ryabinin, says the agency isn't performing adequate tests and said it is likely fuel has entered the lake.

A rescuer works collecting oil contaminated water from an oil spill outside Norilsk on June 5, 2020. /AP

A rescuer works collecting oil contaminated water from an oil spill outside Norilsk on June 5, 2020. /AP

"If a storm comes, (the fuel) will settle down on the banks and will slowly poison the ecosystem of Norilsk and Pyasino. The consequences won't be immediate. It might also reach the Kara Sea," he told The Associated Press. "I had said several times that we have to examine Lake Pyasino and then determine the location for tests."

The power plant is operated by a division of Norilsk Nickel, whose giant plants in the area have made Norilsk, 2,900 kilometers (1,800 miles) northeast of Moscow, one of the most heavily polluted cities in the world.

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Source(s): AP