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Oil-soaked sands and rescued animals: One year after the Kerch Strait spill, beaches in southern Russia remain polluted

Source: Meduza

On December 15, 2024, one of the largest environmental disasters in Russian history struck the Kerch Strait. Two Russian oil tankers sank during a storm, spilling an estimated 2,400 to 4,000 tons of oil into the sea. Within days, thick fuel oil began washing ashore along the Black Sea coast of Krasnodar Krai, near the resort city of Anapa. For months afterward, emergency crews, local residents, and more than 60,000 volunteers from across Russia worked to clean the oil from the beaches. With little help from the authorities, many were forced to buy protective gear and equipment out of their own pockets. Anapa’s summer tourist season was effectively lost, as officials closed the beaches and banned swimming in the sea. A year later, cleanup work is still ongoing, and fuel oil continues to coat the shoreline. Environmental experts say the ecosystem may take five to six years to fully recover. Here’s how the cleanup unfolded over the past year, and what Anapa’s beaches look like today.

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January 14, 2025

Maxim Grigoryev / TASS / Profimedia

Fuel oil on the beach in Anapa. December 15, 2024.

Kedr.Media

December 21, 2024

Sergey Pivovarov / Reuters / Scanpix / LETA

Oil-covered stones on the beach. December 21, 2024.

Kedr.Media

Volunteers at work cleaning a section of the beach. December 25, 2024.

Dmitry Feoklistov / TASS / Profimedia

Volunteers use flour to clean oil-covered birds. December 20, 2025.

Sergey Pivovarov / Reuters / Scanpix / LETA

Volunteers clean oil-covered birds. December 21, 2024.

Alexey Maishev / RIA Novosti / Sputnik / Profimedia

A great crested grebe covered in oil on a beach in the village of Blagoveshchenskaya. December 18, 2024.

Sergey Malgavko / TASS / Profimedia

An oil patch near the village of Blagoveshchenskaya. December 18, 2024.

Sergey Malgavko / TASS / Profimedia

A volunteer sifts through sand contaminated with oil. Anapa. February 28, 2024.

Vitaly Timkin / Sputnik / Profimedia

Volunteers set up a net to collect oil residue. February 8, 2025.

Igor Onuchin / TASS / Profimedia

Sand from Anapa’s oil-contaminated beaches. May 2025.

Kedr.Media

Volunteers from a rehabilitation center cleaning oil from a great crested grebe. April 2025.

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Volunteers clean an oil-covered swan in the village of Vityazevo. April 2025.

Bereg

A little grebe affected by the oil spill that could not be saved. April 2025.

Bereg

An emergency worker cleans oil from stones. May 2025.

Kedr.Media

Fuel oil on the beach near Lazurny Bereg. May 2025.

Kedr.Media

A worker cleans stones on Vysoky Bereg beach. May 2025.

Kedr.Media

Cleanup workers patrol the beach in Vityazevo. June 2025.

Bereg

An empty beach in Vityazevo. June 2025.

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Fuel oil in the surf zone on the beach in Vityazevo. June 2025.

Bereg

A volunteer shows fuel oil collected from the beach on Anapa’s Bugaz Spit. July 2025.

Kedr.Media

Bags of fuel oil collected from the seabed are tied to special ropes, making it easier to haul them ashore. July 2025.

Kedr.Media

A diver prepares to enter the sea to collect oil from the seabed. July 2025.

Kedr.Media

A loon found on the beach on October 2025 at a rehab center.

Zhemchuzhnaya Rehabilitation Center

Oil on the beach on the Bugaz Spit in the village of Blagoveshchenskaya. October 24, 2025.

Zhora Kavanosyan

Oil-covered trash on the beach. December 15, 2025.

Bereg

An oil-covered crab. December 15, 2025.

Bereg

Sand berms built to keep oil seawater off the shore during storms in Anapa. December 15, 2025.

Bereg