Fishing vessel Eric J spill at Port of Poulsbo
The state Department of Ecology (Ecology), U.S. Coast Guard, and Port of Poulsbo are responding to an oil spill at the Poulsbo Marina. Cleanup is being conducted.
Summary information
Poulsbo Marina, Liberty Bay, WA
The Eric J surrounded by booms and other oil cleanup materials.
Status updates
June 3, 2011
Ecology and US Coast Guard is responding to a fishing vessel spill at the Port of Poulsbo. Cleanup is being conducted.
Ecology and Coast Guard responding to Liberty Bay diesel sheen
The state Department of Ecology (Ecology), U.S. Coast Guard, and Port of Poulsbo are responding to an oil spill at the Poulsbo Marina. Staff at the marina have placed boom – a floating barrier to stop the spread of oil – plus oil cleanup materials around a vessel with a leaking fuel tank.
The boom and cleanup materials came from an Ecology spill-response equipment trailer, one of several placed at ports and harbors around the state to speed responses to oil spills. The local fire department assisted in deploying the boom.
The state Department of Ecology (Ecology) and the U.S. Coast Guard responded Friday, June 3, to a leaking fishing vessel moored at the Poulsbo Marina on Liberty Bay.
Ecology was notified of the incident at about 8:30 a.m. today. Port of Poulsbo staff already had placed boom – a floating barrier to stop the spread of oil – and oil cleanup materials around the Eric J, a fishing vessel with a leaking fuel tank. The Poulsbo fire department assisted in deploying the boom.
By 7 p.m., at least 70 gallons of diesel fuel had been recovered from the water. It’s unclear how much fuel had leaked into Liberty Bay.
At this time, the vessel’s owner continues to pump fuel from the tank. Fuel is no longer leaking from the vessel into the water. Responders believe the Eric J has at least 2,000 gallons of fuel on board.
Coast Guard pollution investigators remain on the scene to monitor the cleanup and fuel recovery effort. The owner reportedly has hired a tug company to tow the Eric J to Port Townsend next week.
The boom and cleanup materials came from an Ecology spill-response equipment trailer, one of several placed at ports and harbors around the state to speed responses to oil spills.
Washington’s natural resources are always put at risk whenever oil is spilled or hazardous materials are released to the environment. All oil spills matter, regardless of size. The damage starts as soon as oil hits the water. Oil products are poisonous to the environment and they add to the toxic load to our water bodies. Spills also are difficult and costly to clean up. That’s why Ecology works to prevent spills from occurring in the first place.