Fuel removal under way on Costa Concordia

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Mon, 13 Feb 2012 12:29p.m.

The capsized Costa Concordia cruise ship (Reuters)

The capsized Costa Concordia cruise ship (Reuters)

Authorities in Italy say pumping operations have begun to remove some of the 500,000 gallons of fuel aboard the cruise ship that ran aground off Tuscany.

The civil protection department says the fuel extraction operation started Sunday afternoon (local time) nearly a month after the Costa Concordia slammed into a reef and capsized off the tiny island of Giglio.

Plans to empty the Concordia's fuel tanks were delayed first by the search and rescue operation and then by nearly two weeks of bad weather. A fuel leak would be disastrous for the pristine waters around Giglio, which are part of a protected maritime sanctuary.

Seventeen people died in the grounding and 15 are presumed dead.

AP

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