None of this can occur without Houthi cooperation. Yemeni Information Minister Moammar al-Eryani accused the rebels of using the supertanker as a “tool for blackmail and bargaining,” tweeting that the floating oil tanker that could cause a catastrophe “100x [that] of Beirut.”
Experts say it’s not a matter of if the Safer ruptures, but when. Seawater leaked into the vessel’s engine room in May, risking an explosion. A team of divers was able to patch the leak, but without an independent assessment, the UN says it’s impossible to know what caused it. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo recently referred to the ship as a “ticking time bomb.”
The United Nations estimates that in a worst-case scenario, a spill would force a six-month closure of the Houthi-controlled Hodeidah port and cause a 200% spike in fuel costs. The cost of food, 90% of which Yemen imports, would double. In the event of a fire on board the ship, millions of Yemenis could be exposed to toxic fumes.
Holm Akhdar, an independent Yemen-based environmental group whose name means Green Dream, said the Safer risks the loss of the biodiversity and natural habitats on more than 115 Yemeni islands.
The group estimates 300 species of coral reefs would disappear from Yemeni waters because the thick film of oil would prevent oxygen and sunlight from reaching them. A spill would also put at risk roughly 1.5 million migratory birds who cross Yemen’s Bab el-Mandeb Strait to Africa each year.
Mohammed al-Hakimi, a researcher at Holm Akhdar, sees obvious parallels between the Safer and the missed warnings that led to the Beirut blast, which Lebanese officials blamed on explosive material that authorities stored improperly for years.
“The difference is that the FSO Safer will be much larger than Beirut. The humanitarian cost will be much greater,” Hakimi said.
Spilled oil would wreak havoc on a country already experiencing what the United Nations describes as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. More than five years of war between the Houthis and the Saudi-led military coalition has left some 24 million people — 80% of the population — reliant on humanitarian aid.
The threat of famine looms over all of Yemen. A spill would sever a lifeline for UN food deliveries as the port of Hodeidah, through which most arrive, would likely close for months.
It would deal a massive blow to Yemen’s fishing industry, the country’s second-largest export. Holm Akhdar estimates some 67,800 fishermen in Hodeidah alone would lose their entire livelihoods if the Safer leaks.
“It will become a global problem,” al-Hakimi said, noting the potential to disrupt globally important shipping routes in the Red Sea through which millions of barrels of oil flow each day.
In addition to impacting some 20,000 ships that pass through the waterway every year, the United Nations warns other Red Sea countries, including Djibouti, Eritrea and Saudi Arabia, would experience the fallout from a spill.
As experts sound the alarm, the rebels continue to demand assurances they could share in the revenue from the 45-year-old vessel’s oil. The cargo, they claim, is worth $40 million.
David Soud, head of research and analysis at I.R. Consilium, calls that figure “a fantasy. Having sat in hot, corroded tankers for years, he says the “degraded cargo will be a very tough sell.”
Even if Houthi estimates are correct, Soud points out the cost of any salvage operation would exceed the oil’s value.
“Is that amount of money worth risking a disaster that could kill millions? … Is it worth long-term damage to the Red Sea?” Soud asked. He wondered whether Beirut “will help the Houthis to answer these questions.”