Abu Dhabi: The Ministry of Environment and Water told the Federal National Council (FNC) that it has been coordinating with specialists from federal and local authorities to recover a cargo ship carrying hundreds of tonnes of diesel which sank off the coast of Umm Al Quwain in October.

According to a letter sent to the FNC this morning. Dr Rashid Ahmad Bin Fahd, Minister of Environment and Water, the ministry has also worked with specialised private companies to ensure the protection of marine and habitat facilities in the area.

The minister, however failed to appear at the 40-member house to explain the ministry's efforts regarding operations to recover the ship, and sent a letter instead, but the FNC said that the minister must attend the next session of the house to answer the questions of the house.

The letter stated that the minister was working to protect environmentally and economically sensitive facilities and breeding and nursing habitats of marine species across the country's coastline. The case of the vessel was now with the Public Prosecutor.

"The Ministry of Environment and Water demanded that the owner of the ship bear the costs of recovering it and any other related works," Bin Fahd said.

Hamad Ahmad Al Rahoumi, an elected member from Dubai, put a question to the minister on measures taken by the ministry to address the problem.

Al Rahoumi, who heads a committee on agriculture and fisheries, insisted the minister has to expalain to the house the development of the accident he wanted the Ministry of Environment and Water to get to the root of the problem. "Efforts should be made to correct or eliminate the root causes of ship sinking and oil spills rather than beating around the bush."

Al Rahoumi, General Manager of the Fishermen's Cooperative Society and the owner of the first live fish-trading project in the UAE, said oil spills severely affect marine wildlife, water desalination plants and creeks, to mention a few.

"Quicker actions and a higher degree of preparedness by the Environment Ministry are needed to truly solve the problem by addressing its root causes."

The representative questioned the measures taken more than a month after the vessel, White Whale, sank.

The ship was said to be lying on the seabed at a depth of 35 metres, about 35 nautical miles off the coast of Umm Al Quwain and about 25 nautical miles east of Sharjah's Port Khalid.

The UAE's largest oil spill happened in 1994 when two oil tankers, Baynuna and Seki, collided off the coast of Fujairah. An estimated 16,000 metric tonnes of light Iranian crude oil were released, initially polluting 30km of coastline.

Al Rahoumi said he would demand the ministry take all measures to protect environmentally and economically sensitive facilities and breeding and nursing habitats of marine species across the country's coastline. A group of judges who are also environmental activists have recently urged that the UAE should have courts dedicated to environmental issues.