goa tar balls


Reminiscent of the major oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, tar balls are washing up on beaches in Goa, India, making it a nasty time for tourists showing up for sun and fun in the popular summer holiday region.

The tar balls are not coming from a broken offshore oil well like they were in the BP disaster, but from a passing oil tanker that dumped tons of waste oil off the coast.

The popular winter sun destination of Goa faces a tourism disaster after an unidentified ship dumped tons of waste oil into the sea off western India.

Tar balls have started washing up on the some of the area's most visited beaches forming solid six-inch layers of oil on the sand, just a month before peak tourist season begins.

Scores of civic workers are using brooms to collect and clear the debris, but more tar is washing ashore all the time, said Swapnil Naik, Goa's top tourism official.

Nearly 2.5 million tourists visit annually, including half a million foreigners, mostly from the UK, Israel and Russia.

'This should not have happened. It will not be good for tourism in Goa,' said Gaurish Dhond, president of the Travel and Tourism Association of Goa.

Goa depends heavily on tourism for revenue and attracts some 2.4 million visitors every year, including about 400,000 from overseas. The main tourist season runs from October to March.



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/article-1308272/Goa-oil-spill-Workers-clean-beaches-tourism-disaster-strikes.html#ixzz0yV8dbyCg

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/article-1308272/Goa-oil-spill-Workers-clean-beaches-tourism-disaster-strikes.html#ixzz0yV8VTDOm

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