Abstract

Oil spills on the ocean from ships have a strong impact on the environment as well as on human societies. The MV X-Press Pearl container ship incident in 2021 became the worst marine environmental disaster in Sri Lanka due to its powerful impact. Oil leakage from the ship to the ocean continued for months. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery has the advantage of penetrating cloud cover, as well as day and night operating capabilities. Therefore, SAR imagery can be used to detect as well as observe the temporal changes of oil spills. The study in this article aimed to detect the oil spill caused by the MV X-Press Pearl container ship on Sri Lanka’s west coast from May to August 2021 using Sentinel-1 SAR data and measure the temporal changes of the oil slick. Three SAR imageries with Vertical-Vertical (VV) and Vertical-Horizontal (VH) polarization from June, July, and August of 2021 have been processed by applying the orbit file, running the multi-looking algorithm, and making the ellipsoid correction. The possible oil spills have been identified from each set of imagery as dark linear shapes with lengths of 3.1 ±0.012 km with an average reflectance of 15.6 decibels for June and 3.6 ±0.012 km with an average reflectance of 16.5 decibels for the other two months, and the shapes correspond with the oil slick classifications from other literature. The results indicate that the VV polarization is the most suitable to detect oil spills, and that the oil spill from the X-Press Pearl continued from June to the end of August 2021.

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