Community Corner
Oil Sheen Spotted Off Orange County Coast
The U.S. Coast Guard and an emergency response team are investigating the source of the spill.

HUNTINGTON BEACH, CA — An emergency response team is investigating a 2.5-mile-long oil slick off the coast of Huntington Beach Friday morning.
The source of the slick is unclear, but authorities suspect it may be linked to an oil spill from one of several oil platforms off the local coast.
According to the Coast Guard, the slick is nearly 3 miles off the coast, near the oil platforms named Emmy and Eva. The slick was first reported at 6:50 p.m. Thursday, and Coast Guard vessels deployed in the water at daybreak Friday to investigate.
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"The Coast Guard is contacting all potential spill sources in the area, but no source has been identified," according to a USCG statement early Friday afternoon. "Additionally, the Coast Guard has hired an oil spill response organization to conduct offshore oil collection and is working to identify possible impacts to the shoreline and environmental protection strategies.
"At this time, no oiled wildlife has been observed. The public is asked not to approach impacted animals if observed and to call the Oiled Wildlife Care Network at 1-877-823-6926. This is not an informational or volunteer hotline."
Find out what's happening in Newport Beach-Corona Del Marfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Some tar balls were spotted on the sand in Huntington Beach, but it was unclear if the two events were related.
Orange County Supervisor Katrina Foley announced the investigation on X.
"REAKING NEWS! I just was informed by our emergency response team of an oil spill off HB. Early thoughts are that it’s from a platform," she wrote. "Our county teams and coast guard are heading out now to investigate."
Foley visited Dog Beach in Huntington Beach and got some of the tar on her shoes, but she said the problem appears to be contained.
"It's contained is what I understand, but they're still investigating and the good news is we have all the resources out there," Foley said. "And they'll get it cleaned up quickly."
Foley said regular Dog Beach visitors reported the tar balls were worse than usual.
nformational or volunteer hotline."
Some tar balls were spotted on the sand in Huntington Beach, but it was unclear if the two events were related.
Orange County Supervisor Katrina Foley visited Dog Beach in Huntington Beach and got some of the tar on her shoes, but she said the problem appears to be contained.
"It's contained is what I understand, but they're still investigating and the good news is we have all the resources out there," Foley said. "And they'll get it cleaned up quickly."
Foley said regular Dog Beach visitors reported the tar balls were worse than usual.
An oil spill in the same general area in 2021 has led to reforms that appear to have improved the response, Foley said.
"We have a better system in place now," Foley said. "Everybody is all coordinated now -- better than they were before so they got a quick response out there."
Brady Bradshaw of the oceans program at the Center for Biological Diversity called discovery of the sheen "grim," adding, "We have to do a lot more than just try to mop up the miles-long mess."
"This same tangle of pipelines and platforms produced the massive 2021 spill, and it's time for state and federal regulators to take tough, urgent action to get this decrepit infrastructure out of the ocean," Bradshaw said in a statement. "California's wildlife and coastal communities have suffered too much for too long and there's no more room for excuses."
The same area suffered one of the largest oil spills in recent Southern California history in 2021 when more than 26,000-gallons of oil leaked from a pipeline into the water, washing up along the coast and coating local wildlife.
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City News Service contributed to this report.
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