The ecological catastrophe began December 15, when two Russian oil tankers, the Volgoneft-212 and the Volgoneft-239, sank ...
In southwestern Russia, thousands of volunteers are cleaning up the beaches polluted by the sinking of two oil tankers in the ...
Russian officials have revised their estimates of the oil spill in the Black Sea, now reporting that approximately 2,400 metric tons of oil products were released, a reduction from initial figures.
Russia had suffered heavy losses in five months of fighting Ukraine's forces in southern Russia's Kursk region, the president ...
The Delfa Dolphin Rescue and Research Centre noted a total of 61 dead aquatic mammals had washed up the beach, according to ...
The Black Sea is home to different cetacean species — some endangered — and it was the site of an oil spill in the middle of ...
Large numbers of dead dolphins have washed up on the shores and banks of the Black Sea since two Russian oil tankers collided ...
Delfa Dolphin Rescue and Research Center says it found 61 dead cetaceans with over half killed 'likely due to fuel oil spill' ...
"We can expect the number of injured cetaceans to increase in much greater numbers than usual in the coming months." ...
Thousands are attempting to help lessen the damage, but some volunteers say the government is not doing enough to help.
Russian President Vladimir Putin calls the incident an "ecological disaster" as officials and volunteers attempt to clean ...
Emergency workers clean up the beaches of the Black Sea in southern Russia following an oil spill which occured on December 15. Russia's Delfa centre, which rescues and provides rehabilitation for ...