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Oil Spill Threatens North County Beaches

Several popular North San Diego County beaches are closed because of a fuel spill. The spill was spotted five miles off the Encinitas coast yesterday and is now close to beaches. The Coast Guard is in

Oil Spill Threatens North County Beaches

(Photo: Todd LeVeck-Malmi )

Several popular North San Diego County beaches are closed because of a fuel spill. The spill was spotted five miles off the Encinitas coast yesterday and is now close to beaches. The Coast Guard is investigating the source of the spill. KPBS environmental reporter Ed Joyce has more on cleanup efforts.

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The Coast Guard says the slick is about one mile wide and four miles long. The spill, estimated at between 500 and 1,000 gallons, is about 100 yards from the shoreline between Leucadia and Encinitas.

Coast Guard Lieutenant Jereme Altendorf says it's most likely diesel fuel. He says crews are now using oil booms to collect and absorb the petroleum-based spill.   And ocean vegetation is helping too.

Altendorf: The kelp beds are acting as a natural block to the shoreline and with the tide coming in it managed to coalesce and collect there.

He says crews will work until sunset. Altendorf says some of the fuel has reached the shore. A San Diego County Haz-Mat team works that end of the cleanup. But what people notice most is the smell.

Encinitas Lifeguard Robert Veria says fumes from the spill are drifting on shore and in the city.

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Veria: Petroleum products are not a very good thing to ingest, it's not a good thing to get in your eyes, breathe in, get on your skin. So basically water contact as long as this is in the water is our primary concern. What's more disturbing I think for most folks is that it actually has a fume and at times the fume can be very strong.

Short-term exposure to fumes can make people dizzy, but there's no reports of anyone becoming sick. Beaches from Leucadia to South Encinitas are closed, including Grandview, Beacon's and Moonlight Beach. The beaches are expected to remain closed through tomorrow.

The Coast Guard says they expect minimal effects on wildlife. The oily sheen on the water was reported yesterday morning by a boater. The Coast Guard is checking records to identify which ships were nearby over the past two days. The spill also caused the cancellation of a surf contest tomorrow at Moonlight Beach.

Ed Joyce, KPBS News.