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Satellite images show a possible oil spill near Iran's Kharg Island Export Hub

Satellite images this week showed a suspected oil spill covering dozens square kilometers of sea near Iran's main oil hub, Kharg Island.

Images from Copernicus Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 satellites on May 6-8 showed a grey-and-white slick covering the waters west of the island's 8-kilometre (five-mile) length.

Leon Moreland of the Conflict and Environment Observatory said that "the slick appeared visually consistent with oil." He estimated that it covered an area of about 45 square kilometers. Louis Goddard of 'consultancy Data Desk', which focuses primarily on commodities and climate, also agreed that it was likely an oil slick. He said the images were the largest since the start of the U.S./Israel war against Iran, 70 days ago.

Requests for comment about the images were not immediately responded to by the U.S. Military and Iran's Mission to the United Nations at Geneva.

Moreland said that the cause and origin of the spill are unknown at this time, adding that images taken on May 8 did not show any evidence of active spills.

Kharg Island is the hub of 90% of Iran's crude oil exports. Most of it is headed for China. The U.S.?Navy is blocking Iran's ports to?stop Tehran's oil tankers from entering or exiting. Meanwhile, U.S. forces and Iranian forces are fighting in the Gulf.

The war in the Gulf has also 'trapped hundreds of ships and caused the biggest disruption of crude oil supply worldwide, along with affecting global supplies of oil and gas products.

(source: Reuters)