Israel has been forced to close all of its Mediterranean beaches after an offshore oil spill resulted in tar hitting 100 miles of coastline.
Officials are calling the incident one of the country’s worst ecological disasters.
Large globs of black tar began appearing on Israel’s coast last week after a heavy storm washed the petroleum by-products ashore, wreaking havoc on wildlife.
Researchers from the country’s agriculture ministry confirmed on Sunday that a dead young fin whale that washed up on a beach in southern Israel had died from ingesting the viscous black liquid.
The exact cause of the spill has yet to be determined and is currently under investigation by Israeli environmental officials.
Volunteers took to the beaches to help clean up the tar, but several were taken to hospital after they inhaled toxic fumes.
The environmental protection, health and interior ministries issued a joint statement on Sunday warning the public not to visit the entire length of the country’s 120-mile Mediterranean coastline, cautioning that “exposure to tar can be harmful to public health”.
Environmental protection minister Gila Gamliel said her department estimates the clean-up project will cost tens of millions of shekels.
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu toured one of the country’s tar-strewn beaches on Sunday and praised the ministry’s work.
Israel’s nature and parks authority has called the spill “one of the most serious ecological disasters” in the country’s history.
In 2014, a crude oil spill in the Arava Desert caused extensive damage to one of the nation’s delicate ecosystems.
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