Brewery accidentally turns sea blood-red at Japanese resort city

Brewery accidentally turns sea blood-red at Japanese resort city
Visitors to a seaside resort metropolis in south-west Japan obtained a shock on Tuesday once they woke to find the normally crystal-clear sea had turned an ominous shade of pink – after a neighborhood brewery sprung a leak.

Photos and movies shared on-line confirmed blood-red water flowing by means of the rivers and port areas of Nago metropolis, on the island of Okinawa, a vacation spot higher recognized for emerald waters and sandy seashores.

But a neighborhood brewery urged folks to not fear, saying there had been a leak at one among its vegetation and that the discoloured water posed no hazard to people or marine life.

Photos and videos shared online showed blood-red water flowing through the rivers and port areas of Nago city, on the island of Okinawa, a destination better known for emerald waters and sandy beaches.
Orion Breweries additionally apologised for inflicting “inconvenience and enormous trouble and worry” and stated it had launched an investigation and was working with authorities to take “countermeasures”. (Nine)

“We believe it was caused by the leakage of propylene glycol – a food additive listed in enforcement regulations of the Food Sanitation Act – contained in cooling water used to cool our factory facilities. We believe the leaked cooling water flowed into a river through a rain gutter, causing the sea to turn red,” Orion Breweries stated.

It added that the leak had been “plugged” by 9.30am on Tuesday (native time) – although a spokesperson for the Japanese Coast Guard informed CNN the seawater close to the brewery was nonetheless pink as of Wednesday morning.

Propylene glycol is often used within the meals, cosmetics and pharmaceutical industries.

<p>A snake-catcher on the Sunshine Coast has proved his job isn't for the faint of heart by pulling a long red-bellied black snake from inside a bulldozer.</p>
<p>Professional Sunshine Coast snake catcher Mark Neath posted the video to his YouTube account last week showing the determined reptile's attempts to avoid extraction from inside the mammoth machine.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Mr Neath told ninemsn the extraction took more than 40 minutes to complete despite knowing the whereabouts of the snake.</p>
<p>"We knew exactly where the snake was and normally a red belly snake - unless it has been agitated - will sit and stay in the spot," he said.</p>
<p>"It doesn't look like I spent a lot of time. I ducked my head under there and I spent 10 to 15 mins looking before I put the hook in to pull his tail out."</p>
<p>Mr Neath became a snake hander five years ago leaving his 20 year career as a computer programmer. <a href="http://www.markneath.com/">He now runs his own business as a snake catcher and relocator.</a></p>
<p>"A scary and gratifying job but not one for the faint of heart," he said.</p>
<p>Based in Buderim Mr Neath is speaking from bitter experience having spent time in a Gold Coast emergency department after being bitten by a marsh snake.</p>
<p>Click through to see the most heart warming and disturbing animal rescues ever filmed.</p>
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Red-bellied black snake rescued from bulldozer

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) classifies it as “generally recognised as safe” to be used in meals.

Orion Breweries additionally apologised for inflicting “inconvenience and enormous trouble and worry” and stated it had launched an investigation and was working with authorities to take “countermeasures”.

Roughly 640 kilometres south-west of mainland Japan, Okinawa is Japan’s fifth largest island and has been a strategic location for US armed forces because the 1945 Battle of Okinawa in World War II.

The island is right now a preferred vacationer vacation spot for worldwide travellers.

News of the pink seawater amused some social media customers however left others questioning if the water was secure.

One Twitter consumer stated crowds of individuals had gathered to have a look at the pink sea. “What is this? Is our ocean ok? The seawater is so red,” he tweeted.

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Source: www.9news.com.au