Thousands of fish are floating lifeless on the River Oder, which flows through Germany and Poland, raising fears of an environmental ‘disaster’ as local people are told to stay away from its waters.
These shoals of fish flocking, belly up, to the shores near the town of Schwedt in eastern Germany, were likely carried by the current from Poland where the first cases were reported by locals and fishermen from 28 July.
AFP
German officials, taken by surprise by their massive arrival, accused the Polish authorities of failing to inform them.
German Environment Minister Steffi Lemke has demanded an exhaustive investigation to determine the causes of this “environmental disaster”.
In Poland, the right-wing populist government has come under fire for not reacting sooner.
AFP
Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki assured on Saturday that he had been informed “August 9 or 10” of the pollution. “It is obvious that I learned this too late”.
“At first everyone thought it was just a local problem,” he said on his weekly podcast on Friday.
“The scale of the pollution is very large, large enough to say that the Oder will need whole years to return to its natural state,” he acknowledged.
Standing at the water’s edge, Michel Tautenhahn, deputy head of the Lower Oder Valley National Park, stares in dismay in the direction of the river, which forms a natural border between Poland and Germany.
“We are on the German side. We have dead fish everywhere,” he told AFP.
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“I am deeply shocked…I feel like I see decades of work being ruined…Water is our life,” he says, adding that a host of other aquatic animals such as that the mussels also succumbed.
Fish, “it’s just the tip of the iceberg,” he says.
The Oder has been considered a relatively clean river for many years, supporting around 40 species of fish.
Many – some a few centimeters long, others almost 40 cm long – are now floating lifeless on the river. Sometimes we see some of them flapping their tails and turning around with difficulty to try to swim.
Authorities believe the fish were likely poisoned.
Their death is “atypical,” explains Axel Vogel, Minister of the Environment for the Land of Brandenburg, judging that “tons” of fish have probably already perished.
Fish kills are often caused by the distortion of oxygen levels when the water level is too low, he explains.
“But we have noticed an increase in the oxygen level for several days, which indicates that a foreign substance has been introduced and caused all this”, according to him.
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Tests are underway in Germany to establish the nature of this substance. Authorities have already reported signs of extremely high levels of mercury.
Further preliminary tests released on Friday evening revealed an unusually high salinity level. Other results are expected on the possible presence of heavy metals or mercury.
In Poland, the prosecution has been seized of the case, while indignation is growing in the country. The head of government on Friday dismissed two water and environmental protection officials, whom he blamed for “acting too slowly”.
On Saturday, the Polish police offered a reward of 210,000 euros to find the author of the pollution.
On the banks of the Oder in Germany, Mr. Tautenhahn worries regarding the future. “If it’s mercury, it will stay there for a long time,” he said, recalling that this metal does not disintegrate and might remain for many years in the sediments.