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A Japanese ‘ghost fleet’ of rusting WWII wrecks is poisoning this Pacific paradise

After 80 years at the bottom of a remote Pacific lagoon, a sunken Japanese warship has begun to spill its toxic cargo into the environment

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Chuuk Lagoon in the Federated States of Micronesia, around 5,800km west of Hawaii. Photo: Julian Ryall
Julian Ryallin Chuuk State, Micronesia
Beneath the turquoise waters of a remote Pacific atoll, a Japanese warship sunk more than 80 years ago has begun leaking fuel oil, threatening ecological disaster.

The source of the leak is the Rio de Janeiro Maru, a huge vessel used by the Imperial Japanese Navy as a submarine tender during World War II that was sunk by American bombers more than 80 years ago.

Today, as oil streams from its rusting hulk, officials in the Chuuk Islands fear this may be just the first instance of hazardous waste and toxic discharge from a “ghost fleet” of over 60 wartime wrecks that lie at the bottom of its massive lagoon.

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Brad Mori, executive director of Chuuk’s Environmental Protection Agency, said the leak was first detected on September 11 when divers noticed oil escaping from the wreck of the Rio de Janeiro Maru.

Initial footage suggested as much as 4,000 litres (10,570 gallons) of oil per day were escaping from the wreck, although that rate had since slowed, Mori said.

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“Oil can be seen coating the mangrove roots and shorelines,” he told This Week in Asia, adding that it “threatened the livelihoods and food security” of the surrounding fishing communities.

The writer scuba diving near the wreck of the Kiyosumi Maru, another Japanese Imperial Navy vessel, in Chuuk Lagoon in February. Photo: Julian Ryall
The writer scuba diving near the wreck of the Kiyosumi Maru, another Japanese Imperial Navy vessel, in Chuuk Lagoon in February. Photo: Julian Ryall
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