Annual oil spills in Russia twice more than detected during 2010 Deepwater Horizon crash

1,5 million tonnes of oil are spilled in Russia annually, The Guardian reports. The main cause is a 60% deterioration of pipeline infrastructure, says Natural Resources and Environment Minister Sergey Donskoy. Because of affordable fines and poor judgement, oil companies prefer to fix existing spills or even do nothing at all instead of investing in infrastructure improvement. Over a half of the state budget is provided by the oil and gas production industry, and Greenpeace reports that high profitability of oil companies in Russia is based on environmental degradation, and the whole situation is contrary to the current law.

Plenty of oil spills can be found in the Komi Republic in the North of Russia. This is where Russian oil production began in 1745, and the modern oil industry started to develop in the Soviet Union in the 1960-1970s. Now the pipeline infrastructure is pretty worn out, and, therefore, exposed to numerous accidents. The biggest oil spill ever happened in 1994, in the city of Usinsk, which is a regional oil hub with the population almost of 40,000 people. It was a spillage of 60,000 to 120,000 tonnes of oil by different estimations, which polluted a large area of the tundra.

Permanent oil pollution spoils not only wild nature but also drinking water, and statistics obtained in 2010 in the hospital of Ust-Usa (a village with the population of 1,300 on the Pechora river) shows rises in different kinds of illnesses such as circulatory, nervous and endocrine system diseases. Residents depend on oil companies because they often provide the only employment opportunity in the area, but people protest the effects of oil-drilling asking oil companies not to leave, but 'drill in a way so that we can live with clean air and water'. More than 16,000 people have signed a Greenpeace petition demanding oil companies be required to replace by 2022 all more than 25 years old oil pipelines.

Komi is not the only place where oil spills are detected, the situation in more remote areas can be even worse. According to the information given to Greenpeace by the State Energy Statistics Bureau, there were 11,709 pipeline breaks in Russia in 2014. For instance, Canada had less than 150 pipeline involved incidents in the same year. 0,5 million tonnes of oil a year are ejected into the Arctic Ocean through northern rivers such as Pechora. The total quantity of spilled oil in Russia is twice greater than released during the Deepwater Horizon accident in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010. The whole system needs to be changed, and the main item is stricter supervision and environmental legislation observance.