Heavy fuel oil on board Rena is expected to leach out over time, but the ship's owners and insurers say leaving the wreck behind is still the preferred option.
Tauranga City Council has also been told it was not only oil that could contaminate Astrolabe Reef.
Matt Casey QC, and Keith Frentz from Beca AMEC, presented a report to the council on behalf of Daina Shipping Company and insurer The Swedish Club this week.
About one to two tonnes of oil is believed to be on board Rena's sunken stern, clinging to containers, pipes, cargo, plus hydraulic oil. There were about 1646 tonnes of heavy fuel oil on Rena when it grounded. Salvors using the Awanuia bunker barge removed about 1425 tonnes and about 230 tonnes were lost to sea or collected from beaches. This did not include the 21 tonnes of diesel oil on the ship at the time. Of this, 17 tonnes were removed and 4 tonnes were lost at sea.
Six containers carrying cargo of "potential concern" also remained - three contain ferrosilicon, two plastic beads, one copper. Fading aluminium and fluoride from other cargo is expected to be left close to the reef and there was ongoing sampling in attempt to find it. Waikato University coastal scientists have investigated this and preliminary findings should be available within three months.