FILE - In this file photo provided Monday Oct.8, 2018 by the Marine Nationale, a Tunisian ship and a Cypriot ship are seen after a collision in the Mediterranean Sea north of Corsica island. France’s Ecology ministry said oil pellets have reached beaches near Saint-Tropez on the French Riviera on Wednesday, Oct. 17, ten days after two cargo ships collided north of the island of Corsica. The sites are closed to the public and agents are going to be mobilized to collect the pellets, the statement said. (Benoit Emile/Marine Nationale via AP, file)

FILE - In this file photo provided Monday Oct.8, 2018 by the Marine Nationale, a Tunisian ship and a Cypriot ship are seen after a collision in the Mediterranean Sea north of Corsica island. France’s Ecology ministry said oil pellets have reached beaches near Saint-Tropez on the French Riviera on Wednesday, Oct. 17, ten days after two cargo ships collided north of the island of Corsica. The sites are closed to the public and agents are going to be mobilized to collect the pellets, the statement said. (Benoit Emile/Marine Nationale via AP, file)

PARIS (AP) — France’s Ecology Ministry says pellets of oil have reached Mediterranean beaches near Saint-Tropez on the French Riviera ten days after two cargo ships collided north of the island of Corsica.

It said those beaches were closed to the public Wednesday and agents were going to be mobilized to collect the oil. Authorities have also deployed three anti-pollution ships equipped with nets along the coast in the Var region.

The ministry says French and Italian maritime authorities have cleaned up “nearly all” the fuel spill that has spread in the Mediterranean Sea, using a skimmer to suck it up.

A Tunisian cargo ship pierced a hole in the hull of a Cypriot container ship in the collision on Oct. 7, causing the fuel leak. No one was injured.