Ecuador’s state oil company Petroecuador resumed crude oil transportation through its main pipeline Wednesday morning, according to an official announcement released yesterday.
The Trans-Ecuadorian Pipeline System (SOTE) restarted operations at 9:19 AM after a six-day shutdown caused by a massive rupture. A catastrophic landslide damaged the pipeline on March 13 in Esmeraldas province, approximately 160km northwest of Quito.
The rupture created what witnesses described as an oil “geyser” that spewed for seven hours. Local officials estimate around 200,000 barrels of crude escaped into the environment.
Petroecuador removed 225,000 cubic meters of earth before completing repairs to both the oil pipeline and a damaged fuel transport duct. Recovery teams have collected only about 13,800 barrels of oil and water from affected areas so far.
The environmental impact extends along more than 80 kilometers of the Esmeraldas River and its tributaries. Five rivers now carry crude oil contamination, with the Viche and Caple rivers suffering complete oxygen depletion.
Ecuador Restarts Oil Pipeline After Devastating Environmental Spill. (Photo Internet reproduction)
The oil slick threatens the Esmeraldas River Estuary Mangrove Wildlife Refuge, home to 250 animal species. “The spill means a temporary loss of aquatic life,” explained marine biologist Eduardo Rebolledo Monsalve. “Recovery could take three years even with mild rainy seasons.”
Ecuador Faces Environmental and Economic Crisis
Nearly 500,000 people face water access problems as communities along the Esmeraldas River implement strict rationing. Residents report respiratory issues and skin infections from oil exposure.
Fishing communities watch their livelihoods disappear as boats and nets become coated with crude. “If it continues like this, we won’t be able to fish anymore,” lamented Luis Cabezas from Rocafuerte village.
President Daniel Noboa demanded accountability from the state oil company. “Unlike in the past, this time it will answer for its actions with remediation obligations in Esmeraldas.”
The crisis carries serious economic consequences for Ecuador, where oil represents nearly one-third of GDP. Petroecuador declared force majeure Tuesday to avoid penalties for breached contracts with international buyers like Shell.
Response efforts include navy ships delivering 600,000 liters of water to affected communities and deployment of 90 oil recovery tankers. Ecuador has also notified Colombia about potential transboundary impacts as the contamination approaches shared Pacific coastal waters.