Environment Minister says oil on Brazil beaches ‘probably’ Venezuelan

Environment minister Ricardo Salles said that more than 100 tonnes of oil had already been collected from the coastline since 2 September.
  100 tonnes of oil had already been collected from the coastline

BRASILIA, Oct 11 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Thick crude oil that has stained hundreds of miles of pristine Brazilian beach in recent weeks probably originated in Venezuela, the Brazilian government said.

Brazilian authorities have been investigating the growing disaster for more than a month, as the oil has spread to more than 130 beaches across nine states.

Environment Minister Ricardo Salles, told a congressional hearing that a study by the state oil company Petrobras had concluded that the oil “is very likely from Venezuela”.

He said that a foreign ship near Brazil’s coastline appeared to have caused the spill “accidentally or not”.

Salles said that more than 100 tonnes of oil had already been collected from the coastline since Sept 2, but said that the disaster was proving “enormously difficult to contain”.

There was no immediate response from Venezuela, but the Brazilian assertion is likely to further escalate tensions between the two countries.

Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil’s far-right president, is a longstanding critic of Venezuela’s embattled Pres Nicolás Maduro, and has close relations with Venezuelan groups seeking his overthrow.

Earlier this week, Bolsonaro dismissed speculation that the spill had been released by a sinking ship. “If it was a shipwreck, oil would still be coming up. It is more probable that something was dumped there criminally,” he told reporters.

Bolsonaro said he did not want to blame another country without proof, but hinted darkly: “We have a country on our radar screen that could be the origin of the oil.”

Petrobras’s chief executive, Roberto Castello, said on Tuesday that the amount of oil spilled so far – approximately 500 barrels – was far too much to have been from the result of a routine tank cleaning.

The oil’s appearance came shortly after Brazil became the focus of international criticism over record wildfires and deforestation in the Amazon rainforest – both of which have surged since Bolsonaro came to office.

Brazil’s state-owned oil company Petrobas, which is taking part in the clean-up, said the oil “was neither produced nor sold” by the company after analyzing local samples last week.

State-owned Venezuelan oil company PDVSA has not commented. — NNN-AGENCIES

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