A state of emergency has been declared in the Galápagos Islands
exactly one week after a cargo ship ran aground and remains stuck just
offshore of the easternmost island in the archipelago.
The MV Floreana, carrying some 1,400 tons of cargo and 13,000 gallons of fuel, ran aground on January 28 in
the bay of Puerto Baquerizo Moreno just off the coast of San Cristóbal,
shortly after departing San Cristóbal for Santa Cruz and other islands.
The ship remains aground as salvage work to lighten, refloat, and
eventually scuttle the vessel is being carried out by U.S.-based salvage
firm T & T Salvage.
The state of emergency agreement was signed Wednesday by Ecuador’s
minister of the environment, Lorena Tapia, minister of transportation,
Paola Carvajal, and minister of non-renewable natural resources, Pedro
Merizalde, with a recommendation of the Comité de Operaciones de
Emergencia Provincial (COE). The agreement confirms the state of
environmental emergency within the Galapagos Marine Reserve and the
Galapagos National Park and makes the necessary resources available to
act quickly and effectively in the prevention and mitigation of risks
from the grounding.
Specifically, the agreement is aimed at the protection,
rehabilitation and maintenance of marine and coastal ecosystems,
including appropriate measures to prevent the stranding and sinking of
the MV Floreana. The agreement also addresses the maritime
transportation of cargo to and from the Galápagos Islands, as well as
the fuel supply systems in populated areas – including security,
storage, and distribution of hydrocarbons, the COE said.
The state of emergency will remain in effect for 180 days.