East Coast Park beach section near National Sailing Centre reopens for water sports after oil spill
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Follow topic:
SINGAPORE – The East Coast Park beach section near the National Sailing Centre reopened on July 29, more than a month after it was closed for cleanup following an oil spill
The reopened section, Area G, has completed its cleaning and non-primary contact water sports such as kayaking can resume, the National Environment Agency (NEA) said in a Facebook post on July 29.
“While it is safe to use the beach, the public is advised not to swim or undertake primary contact water sports such as wakeboarding and stand-up paddling in the beach waters,” it said, adding that it will continue to monitor the water quality.
“Only when the water quality returns to normal and is stable can water activities fully resume.”
In a separate Facebook post on July 29, the National Parks Board said the rest of the beachfront at East Coast Park remains closed until further notice.
On July 22, NEA announced that beachgoers can visit Areas B and E of East Coast Park.
NEA said the bulk oil at East Coast Park’s land and sea areas has so far been successfully removed.
On June 14 around 2.20pm, Netherlands-flagged dredging boat Vox Maxima hit Singapore-flagged bunker vessel Marine Honour
The damaged cargo tank on Marine Honour, which was next to a container vessel berthed at Pasir Panjang Terminal, leaked oil into the sea.
Owing to the tidal current, the oil landed along shorelines, including those of Sentosa, Labrador Nature Reserve, the Southern Islands, Marina South Pier and East Coast Park.
The oil also spread to the waters off Malaysia’s southern coast, where about 1km of the shoreline in Pengerang in Johor state was affected.
Traces of oil were found on the beaches at Sungai Rengit, a coastal town in Johor, and the nearby Teluk Ramunia.
On July 1, Johor’s Health and Environment Committee chairman Ling Tian Soon said the cleanup at the two locations was nearly completed.
Cleanup work also began at a nearby island in Johor, Pulau Che Kamat, on July 1 after traces of oil sludge were found.

