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Peru’s coastline battered by tsunami-like waves one day after country declares environmental emergency

By Madeline Sherratt

 

The huge swell struck the coastline of Peru, Chile, and Ecuador one day after an environmental emergency was declared in the wake of an oil spill in the region.

13th tsunami-like waves hit Peru and Ecuador coastline

A deadly swell struck Peru’s northern coastline triggering tsunami-like waves that ravaged local communities and forced 75 percent of the nation’s ports to close, potentially devastating local economies.

The over 13-feet waves crashed onto the shores of Lobitos, Mancora, and Cabo Blanco – 700 miles north of Peru’s capital Lima – Friday from around midday, according to local reports.

The extreme weather phenomenon coincides with the 20th anniversary of the Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami which struck India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Indonesia, among other nations, in 2004 killing more than 230,000 people.

Two people were reported to have died in Ecuador’s southwestern Manta region and a 30-year-old man was found dead at a beach in Chile – no deaths have been reported in Peru, according to AFP.

The extreme weather phenomenon came the day after Peru declared an environmental emergency following a shipment from state oil firm Petroperu on December 21 that sent 10,000 square meters of crude oil spilling into the sea, reported Reuters.

The huge waves have caused significant damage to several beaches in northern Peru

The huge waves have caused significant damage to several beaches in northern Peru (Handout/Samantha Watson)

According to the agency, a vessel that had been carrying out pre-shipment maneuvers caused the crude spill at a terminal in the Talara refinery – just a few miles from the small town of Lobitos.

Petroperu has not yet declared exactly how much oil was spilled.

Enrique Varea, the chief of Hydrography and Navigation for Peru’s Navy, said that three-quarters of all ports in Peru have closed as a result of the forceful waves.

In videos taken by Peruvian locals, huge waves can be seen crashing against “Muelle de Lobitos” – a fishing pier – rattling local fishing boats as the waves hurl towards the shore.

Peru declared an environmental emergency Thursday following a crude oil spill in Talara on December 21

Peru declared an environmental emergency Thursday following a crude oil spill in Talara on December 21 (Mateo Lazo)

Another video shows a huge set of waves broaching a pier on the nearby beach of Cabo Blanco.

The gigantic waves were reportedly triggered by an “extreme event”, according to Ecuador’s secretary for risk management Jorge Carillo.

Carillo warned that possibly more disastrous weather events were to come…

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE… (independent.co.uk)

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