Edmonds oil spill

(Information on this site is considered to be accurate at the time of posting, but is subject to change as new information becomes available.)

The Department of Ecology and U.S. Coast Guard responded to an oil spill that occurred early this morning about one-quarter mile west of the Edmonds Ferry Terminal in Snohomish County.

Summary information

Date of incident:  August 30, 2006
Location:

1/4 mile west of Edmonds, WA

Type of incident: Oil sheen
Cause of incident: Undetermined/unknown
Responsible party: Unknown
Satellite image of spill area.

Satellite image of area showing approximate positions of spill near Edmonds at about 6:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.

Status updates

September 1, 2006

During the oil spill near Edmonds Aug. 30, Ecology responders were able to get a sample of the spilled oil.

The department is now waiting for the results of a lab analysis regarding the type of oil spilled. The analysis should be done next week.  

Ecology also is continuing its investigation regarding potential sources of the spill, which at its peak covered about 140 acres of water.

August 30, 2006

The Department of Ecology (Ecology) and U.S. Coast Guard responded to an oil spill that occurred early this morning about one-quarter mile west of the Edmonds Ferry Terminal in Snohomish County.

Ecology sent responders to the spill site to determine strategies to clean up the spill and help keep adverse environmental effects to a minimum.

The department also hired NRC Environmental Services of Seattle and the Marine Spill Response Corp. of Everett to help respond to the spill.

Both firms own a wide array of spill cleanup equipment including oil skimming vessels and spill containment and deflection boom.

Ecology and Coast Guard responders flew over the spill site to help determine the size, and location. The area was found to contain oil sheen and dark algae. The sheen is not recoverable and response assets are standing down.

The source of the spill and type of oil spilled is still under investigation.

All oil spills, regardless of size, add to the toxic load already entering Puget Sound. Preventing oil spills is part of Gov. Chris Gregoire’s initiative to restore and protect the Sound.

Ecology is still investigating potential sources for today’s oil spill near Edmonds.

While the department is identifying vessels that had made transits through the area, Ecology has not ruled out other sources.

The amount and type of oil product has not been determined, but the slick initially appeared to be heavy or thick in places. Subsequent flyovers revealed that the dark patches were not oil.

Separate early-morning over flights by Ecology and Coast Guard revealed that that the oil slick actually was too thin to clean up.

Thin slicks typically are just molecules thick and no known equipment or methods can remove it from the environment. By noon, most of the spill had dissipated.

Even when a spill cannot be recovered and disperses, the oil adds toxic pollutants to an already threatened Puget Sound.

While no oiled birds or wildlife were reported, all petroleum products are toxic, and no spill of any size is acceptable.

 

Media contact

Ty Keltner, Media contact, ty.keltner@ecy.wa.gov, 360-407-6990