Thursday, December 8, 2011

Other Shores - December 2011

 Operating a US-flagged vessel in foreign commerce in 2010 was 2.7 times dearer than operating a foreign-flagged equivalent, and US-flag crewing costs were more than five times as expensive.
Shipping giant AP Moller-Maersk will use more armed guards on tankers passing through the Gulf of Aden but has “no immediate plans” to extend the policy to its container ships.

Anti-piracy efforts increasingly are focusing on tracing the flow of ransom money. There is growing evidence that it is being invested in the economies of surrounding nations (such as financing a real-estate boom in Kenya). But efforts to trace serial numbers of ransom bills have been thwarted at least twice when Danish authorities lost lists of such numbers.

Mozambique is in the process of becoming the world’s last big source of coal, and now the East African country may become a major supplier of natural gas. An Italian company announced that it had discovered a large offshore gas field. The gas is of unusually high quality and an unusually high percentage of it should be recoverable. Shortly after, the company announced that the field is about 50% larger than originally thought.

In the third quarter, South Korean yards received about half of the total global shipbuilding orders. (For figure freaks, that was 2.5-million gross tons for the period from July to September, about 50% of the 4.9m gt of total global orders.)

The People’s Liberation Army’s 584-foot-long (178-meter-long) hospital ship Peace Ark and more than 100 medical volunteers extended China’s “doctor diplomacy” into the Caribbean at Jamaica.

Thin Places and Hard Knocks
In the Persian Gulf, the oil-service vessel Koosha 1 sank due to a combination of bad weather and overloading. Rescue teams saved sixty people but thirteen divers were trapped in a decompression chamber. Bodies of six were found in the sunken vessel. (Had they tried to escape from the chamber?)

The Finnish fishing vessel Florence collided with the container ship Amazon at night and in dense fog. The crew of the Amazon noticed the collision but regarded the impact as mild, perhaps some flotsam rather than another vessel. The FV sank inside of one minute but an automatic alarm system (an EPIRB?) alerted Finnish and Estonian authorities. Rescuers found the fishermen because they were vigorously blowing the whistles on their lifejackets. In New Zealand’s Queen Charlotte Sound in misty conditions, the 8.5 meter government-owned catamaran workboat Waitohi and an 8.5 metre Herschoff sailboat collided. The sailboat couldn’t sink completely because fittings near the top of its mast caught the catamaran’s safety railing. Because the container ship MSC Nederland ran into the chemical tanker Elka Apollon at the Bayport Ship Channel and Houston Ship Channel intersection near light 75, three containers ended up on the tanker’s deck.

A few miles inshore from where salvors were removing bunker oil from the stranded Rena off Tauranga and figuring out how to remove the remaining containers, the small container ship Schelde Trader lost power and drifted onto rocks despite dropping an anchor. The ship managed to get itself off and was towed further out to sea while experts assessed it for damage before it resumed its voyage to Noumea.

In India at Chicalim in Goa, a worker died and two others were seriously injured when paint solvents exploded on newbuild barge Shantam 3884. The blast was so powerful that the dead man’s body was blown onto the roof of the nearby St Anthony's chapel. Although emergency services were quick to respond, the fire department was late in learning about the incident and arrived an hour after the explosion. Because explosions in compressors used by refrigerated containers have killed at least three maintenance men, hundreds of reefer units have been quarantined. Common to all explosions is that the units were serviced in Vietnam during 2011.

At Diliskelesi (it’s in Turkey), while the Chief Mate was supervising the docking of the chemical tanker Chemstar Yasu, a “maneuvering rope” snapped and hit him. He later died in a local hospital. In Louisiana at Garyville, a worker dismantling a Mississippi River barge was killed when a piece of the deck fell on him. Four Bangladeshi workers died and two others were ill after inhaling toxic gas while dismantling a vessel at a shipbreaking yard in the Chittagong region. All six fell unconscious while working inside a compartment. Their deaths came just days after two other laborers were killed in a similar incident at another local yard, and at a third local scrapping yard, a worker died when he fell from a ship.

Gray Fleets
Sixty-four sailors will be discharged from the US Navy for using or distributing drugs, mostly the designer drug Spice. They were assigned to the nuclear submarine USS San Francisco, the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson, and a floating dry dock. Spice is a synthetic drug that mimics the effects of marijuana. Six sailors also used cocaine and one was found to have used methamphetamines.

Bad apples have a way of being discovered. The former commanding officer of the destroyer USS Momsen will spend three years in jail after being court-martialed on charges stemming from incidents involving a junior female officer and an enlisted woman. He was charged with (hang on) one count of rape, two counts of aggravated sexual assault, two counts of abusive sexual contact, one count of sodomy, two counts of maltreatment, three counts of conduct unbecoming an officer, and four counts of violating general orders.

After years of controversy over which California city would get it, the US Navy transferred title to the battleship USS Iowa to a Los Angeles group. The Pacific Battleship Center plans to operate the ship as an interactive museum at Berth 87.

The Ghana Armed Forces will use four new patrol boats built in China against the country’s recalcitrant fishermen, who have decided to fight naval personnel over fisheries regulations. (A recent clash was over the seizure of generators used in floodlight fishing.) Secondary duties, of course, will be to ensure the safety of the country’s territorial integrity, provide safe sea passage to legitimate traffic, and combat illegal activities such as drug trafficking, piracy, and pair trawling.

The Iran’s Revolutionary Guards increasingly aggressive navy has 20,000 personnel and a large fleet suitable for waging the sort of asymmetric warfare it favors. It is larger than Iran’s traditional navy with its 18,000 sailors.

The Royal Australian Navy patrol boat HMAS Broome was preparing to berth at the Papua New Guinea town of Alotau when word was received that the container vessel Vega Fynen had lost engine power and was drifting toward a reef. The warship raced 146 nautical miles at best speed to rendezvous with the 13,000-ton vessel and was able to slowly pull the vessel away from immediate danger.

Thanks to night-vision goggles and the keen eyes of a midshipman, the offshore patrol boat HMS Mersey rescued a Dutch yachtsman floating in a partially inflated and unlit life raft a couple of miles from the remains of his burning yacht. He had been sailing alone from Lowestoft to his native Holland

White Fleets
The cruise ship Norwegian Gem rescued five sailors from the sailboat Sanctuary about 256 miles northeast of Bermuda. The Queen Mary 2 experienced a fire in a gas turbine exhaust while ten miles east of Cape North, Nova Scotia in rough weather. No injuries, no pollution. Then passengers reported that the ship twice came to a complete stop for a short period while crossing the Atlantic. At Calvi in Corsica, divers had to cut the Mein Schiff 2’s anchor chain after it became jammed between rocks.

When a young man jumped from the 11th deck of the Celebrity Equinox, he hit a lifeboat’s rigging. He was dead when recovered about half an hour later. While the Maasdam was docked at Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, an elderly man was reported missing by his wife. Soon after, a lobster fisherman found a body floating in Northumberland Strait. When the Norwegian Dawn docked at Boston after a cruise to Bermuda, it was carrying the bodies of two recently deceased people. An elderly woman had died of natural causes. The cause of a young man’s death was unknown but it was not considered to be a homicide.

Those That Go Back and Forth
At the Greek port of Piraeus near Athens, unionized seafarers called off an eight-day strike against the government's austerity drive but continued to block some ferry departures. That hampered passenger travel to the Greek islands and left some islands dangerously low on food, fuel, and medical supplies.

The British-flagged ro/pax Hafnia Seaways had a fire on board while en route to Cuxhaven. The fire started in the ship’s sauna and damage was serious enough to require a replacement ferry. Off Albania, the Turkish merchant ship Reina 1 sank in two minutes, taking with it eight sailors, after colliding with the car ferry Ankara. When fire broke out as the Jordanian ferry Pella was some 15 nautical miles from the Jordanian port of Aqaba and headed for the Egyptian port of Nuweiba, 1,230 passengers were told to get into life rafts. One passenger died when he jumped into the sea.

The Algerian-flagged ro/pax Tassili II was forced to return to Oran with more than 2,500/438 (take your pick) passengers and 300/208 (take your pick) vehicles on board due to damage suffered by striking a wharf/rock (take your pick). Passengers refused to get off, demanding to be transported to Marseille, and they spent the night on board before being forced to leave the ship the next morning.

At Hong Kong, three elderly people were seriously hurt and seventy-three others were injured when a high-speed, double-deck catamaran ferry hit a mooring dolphin. The captain explained that he was trying to avoid a light buoy on the portside of the vessel and when he spotted the unlit dolphin on the starboard side, it was too late. The starboard side of the ferry's bow was badly holed, leaving the interior framing exposed, but the vessel took on no water. A helicopter took the most-seriously injured patients to hospitals on Hong Kong Island. In Denmark at Rønne, the Leonora Christina hit one of the two towers that control the vehicle ramp. The ferry suffered a hole that was quickly patched with a steel plate but the tower suffered more. However, the ferry could still carry vehicles but only cars. At Auckland, the Devonport-bound Kea suffered a hole when it somehow backed into the berthed ferry Harbour Cat, punching a hole in that vessel. One person described the contact as “a bit of a crunch.” One minor injury.

After an eyewitness informed police that the Kiel Canal ferry Memel was being operated in an unsafe manner, police found the ferry’s captain under the influence of alcohol and his coffee cup filled with red wine.

Nature
Tsunami debris from Japan's March magnitude 9.0 quake earthquake will reach Hawaii in two years and the West Coast of North America in three years. Based on what has already been encountered by ships at sea, the debris may include floating TV sets, fridges, and other home appliances.

Legal Matters
A US federal judge sentenced a female company administrator to 38 months in prison for her role in selling counterfeit electronic circuits from China and Hong Kong. She conspired with the company's late owner to advertise the circuits as name-brand, trademark-protected integrated circuits and they sold hundreds of thousands of them to the US Navy, defense contractors, and others over a three-year period.

A US defense attorney claimed that the US government is waging a sophisticated sort of piracy in its pursuit of “magic pipe” offenders. He identified the environmental-crimes section of the US Department of Justice as the “mother ship” and noted that, “The average ransom paid by shipowners in Somalia in 2010 was $2 million and their crews spent an average of nine months in detention. Here in the US, the average criminal fine in magic pipe cases is around $2 million and the government requires seafarers to stay behind for nine to 12 months, and sometimes more. What is the difference?” (Since the late-1990s, the US government has probably raised well over $200m through such fines.)

In partial confirmation of the attorney’s claims, read on. The bulker Gaurav Prem was detained at Mobile, Alabama, after the Coast Guard detected a magic pipe infraction. The ship was allowed to leave after the authorities extracted a surety but 16 (repeat – sixteen) crewmembers had to stay behind at the owner’s expense to assist in the investigation. The owner provided lodging, health coverage and a meal allowance of $40 a day to the men, but their passports had to be surrendered.

Nasties and Territorial Imperatives
“A pirate’s life is not an easy one,” wrote Gilbert of Gilbert and Sullivan fame, and his statement is still true. Thirty percent of all Somalian pirates never return from attack missions in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean.

Piracy changes continuously. Pirates are maximizing profits by separating crews from hi-jacked vessels, taking them onshore, and holding them for ransom. And in the southern Red Sea, vessels have been coming under attack by groups of up to a dozen skiffs.

In the Indian Ocean 100 miles off the Somali coast, Royal Marines from the frigate HMS Somerset rescued a group of Pakistani fishermen who had been captured when Somali pirates seized their trawler. The pirates were then transferred to a US warship in the area since British policy is to not take prisoners because they might ask for political asylum. In Indonesian waters, Malaysian forces boarded the tanker Nautica Johor Bahru at night after a group of pirates armed with a pistol and machetes had left along with the crew’s cash, mobile phones, and laptops. The nearby presence of three Royal Malaysia warships may have had something to do with the pirates’ decision to flee. Also recovered was a drifting barge that was being towed by the fishing boat Ever Commender when hijacked. Six armed pirates had left the barge, presumably to hijack a more-powerful towing vessel. The FV with seven crewmembers was located aground but safe. And a Malaysian court sentenced six Indonesians to ten years in jail plus caning for trying to rob a merchant ship near Singapore.

Several kidnap-and-ransom insurers want armed guards on vessels transiting the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean, and others insurers are offering discounts of up to 35 percent to those shipowners employing private security firms for voyages in high-risk areas. (For an average vessel valued at $20 million, the starting price for a policy is about $35,000 for a seven-day transit of the Gulf of Aden. With armed guards on board, a discount of 35 percent would represent a saving of $12,250.) But several states, including France, Greece, and Japan, prohibit the use of armed guards on board vessels.

Near the disputed Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, a Philippine patrol ship (reportedly the World War II-vintage BRP Rizal) spotted a Chinese fishing vessel in Philippine waters near Reed Bank, which the Philippines claims is within its waters. The vessel was towing about 35 smaller boats. A problem with the patrol boat’s steering caused it to become entangled with one of the smaller boats. The Chinese vessel then left, abandoning the smaller boats.

Odd Bits
Back in January, the river tanker Waldhof capsized at a critical pinch point on the River Rhine with the loss of two crew. The accident trapped an estimated 300 barges in the Mainz area of Germany and that cost an estimated €55 million ($75.8 million). Operators hurt the most (about €14 million) due to “involuntary waiting” at up to €4,000 per day per vessel in lost income, while shippers, forwarders and brokers suffered costs of around €26 million, mainly due to having to arrange alternative transport via a shift to other modes or a bypass. The accident also prompted calls for more heavy cranes capable of lifting large Rhine barges.

At Portland, Maine, a fire captain and a firefighter got into trouble when they crashed the fireboat City of Portland IV onto rocks, causing $38,000 of underwater damage. The impact sheared off a propeller shaft and damaged a rudder but the boat was able to return to Portland without aid. To make matters worse, there were twelve civilians, including family members, aboard during what was called “a training exercise.” Back in 2009, the same boat ran aground two months after it was put into service, then sustaining $90,000 worth of damage.

The competence and valor displayed by two shipmasters after the recent Japanese earthquake were recognized by their peers at a recent meeting. The master of the high-sided vehicle carrier Morning Cedar opted to steam out of Onahama Harbor as huge tsunami waves lashed his ship and the docks. He cleared the breakwater and took the ship to safety in the open sea. But that option was not available to the master of the bulker Port of Pegasus. He was on the bridge when a loudspeaker blared a warning in Japanese that nobody on board could understand. But the operator of a crane-like unloader plunged deep into number four hold knew and fled as the tsunami approached. With the unloader still in the ship, the master faced a dilemma: if the ship left the pier, the unloader would be pulled down onto the ship but if the ship departed, it risked being wrecked. When the ship was hit by the first 8-metre wave, all but two mooring lines snapped. For the next 18 hours, the master worked the ship’s propulsion and steering to maneuver the ship, often at full power, in a successful fight against repeated waves and extraordinary currents.

The destroyer HMS Edinburgh was docked at Cape Town near the hotel where the US president’s wife was staying. The Sea Dart missile launchers on the destroyer’s foredeck happened to be pointed at the windows of her suite so, according to reports, the American Secret Service made sure that the missile loads were inert drill rounds.

Head-Shaker
A report revealed how the 280-foot high-speed catamaran ferry Condor Vitesse managed to run down the 30-foot whelk fishing boat Les Marquises south of the Channel Island of Jersey last March. (The whelk fishing boat was cut in half and its skipper was killed although two injured deckhands managed to cling to the hull until rescued 25 minutes later by the ferry.) The ferry was zipping along at 36.9 knots when it entered a thick fog bank. Speed was not reduced, nobody was watching two radars that had been showing the FV for several minutes, and nobody turned on the ferry’s fog signal. (It was thought the engines provided a better warning and, besides, the horn disturbed the officers on watch.) Instead, the bridge team raptly listened to the ferry’s master recount how the slinky movements of sexy actress Halle Berry as Catwoman on TV the night before had given him a bad night's sleep. Then the collision.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Other Shores - November 2011

According to the International Transport Workers’ Federation, morale of seafarers is at an all-time low due to: piracy, fatigue, denial of shore leave, visa problems, the ISPS (International Ship and Port Facility Security Code), and lack of communication facilities while on board. Add the criminalization of seafarers. (A tank-truck driver can have an accident that spills thousands of gallons of oil without the law stepping in but let a vessel create an oily sheen...)

The Southern Africa country of Mozambique has the world’s last major untapped coal reserves but needs heavy investments to get coal to a port for export. The Brazilian mining company Vale has bee making such investments and the first export shipment, 35,000 tons of thermal coal for Lebanon, recently left on the bulker Orion Express.

In its relentless pursuit of a cleaner environment, California passed a law requiring vessels to switch from heavy oil fuels to fuels with less than 1.5% percent sulphur as they approach the state but there has been a 100-percent increase in engine failures and blackouts since the law went into effect in July 2009.

Thin Places and Hard Knocks
A British report revealed details why the feeder container ship K-Wave ran aground at full speed thirteen miles east of Malaga last February while the bridge was unmanned. The vessel’s Voyage Data Recorder preserved sounds of a very boozy party on the bridge involving many ”toasts” and most of the ship’s officers. The festivities broke up after several hours when the second officer announced he needed to carry out his duties as officer of the watch. But he left the bridge at some time in the next four hours, the course was changed, and the ship ultimately and gently ran aground. A local fishing vessel notified the Spanish coast guard that the ship appeared to be aground and about the same time the chief mate found the bridge was unmanned. Efforts by the master to free the ship were unsuccessful. Interestingly, the report noted that the course change was due to a deliberate manipulation of the autopilot controls.

On the Columbia River, an electrical failure put the vehicle carrier Luminous Ace ashore somewhere between Portland and Astoria. No leaks, not much excitement, just the non-routine deployment of a precautionary anchor and the tedious wait for high tide and some tugs. On the Westerschelde, the largest channel leading to Antwerp, the container ship MSC Luciana ran up on a sandbank near the Belgian border. One observer commented, “The ship is well and truly stuck.”

At Hamburg, the container ship Charlotta ran into the stern of the cargo ship Hanse Confidence at high speed. The Hansa Confidence suffered a hull crack that threatened for a time to sink her but fire-brigade pumps barely kept her afloat. Near Singapore, the Singapore-flagged cargo vessel Xetha Bhum collided with the Vietnam-flagged tanker Dainam. The tanker ended up in a drydock while the other vessel anchored with severe damage to its portside. Off Mangalore in India, the fishing vessel Ocean Fisher-2 hit a sunken ship and capsized. The skipper was saved but six others went missing. At 53 12.15 north and 005 18.19 west (that’s near Wicklow harbor, Ireland), the crude-oil tanker Ocean Lady hit the fishing vessel Bridget Carmel in the early morning hours. The FV suffered damage to its topside and derrick. In Sweden at Tjorn in the Bohusian archipelago, some bunker oil spilled after the bulker Golden Trader collided with the Belgian trawler Vidar. Off Pulau Tioman in Malaysia, the smallish chemical tanker Cendanawati sank after being in a collision with the smallish asphalt tanker Cosmic. One master lost his ship and suffered head and neck injuries. In the Kiel Canal in Germany near the Brunsbuttel locks, the tanker John Essberger collided with the German dredger Wilhelm Krûger. The dredger suffered severe water ingress and needed a prompt pump-out.

Ordinarily, pulling a 3,000-ton Coast Guard training ship off a pier is routine work for two tugs, even when waves are 3 meters high and the wind is blowing 10 meters per second. But the 19-ton tug Kita Maru No. 12 capsized while undocking the Miura at Wajima Port in Japan and both tug men died.

Off Jakarta, the FSO (Floating Storage, and Offloading) vessel Lentera Bangsa caught fire and one man was missing. The converted tanker stored crude oil from the Widuri field of Java Sea until shuttle tankers could take the oil ashore to be processed. The damaged FSO was towed away to be repaired and the product tanker Galunggung took its place so production could resume.

At a Chittagong shipbreaking yard in Bangladesh, a worker died in a hospital after large steel plate fell on him. In the Philippines at Subic, at least five workers were killed and eight seriously injured when a 42-ton ramp collapsed. It had provided access to the British-flagged vehicle carrier Tombarra, which was undergoing repairs.

In Alaska, a Coast Guard chopper flew 345 miles to Sand Point, refueled, and headed out to the tanker Murray Star more than 500 miles southwest of Kodiak. There, the helicopter hoisted an unconscious 47-year-old man and flew back to Sand Point.

At Darwin, a container crane was seriously damaged by another crane in strong winds last January. Three months after repairs were completed, the repaired crane smashed into a crawler crane, twanging its cables with considerable ill effect but hurting no one. Elsewhere in Australia, Port Kembla was down to one unrestricted marine pilot and two restricted pilots due to sickness, injury, and annual leave. As a result, there was a stretch when no vessels were alongside and six others waited at anchor. In northwestern Germany on the Hunte River, the self-propelled barge Janine had steering problems at Neuenhuntorf and ended up with its bow on one bank and its stern on the other bank. When the tide went out, the ship broke in half and dumped its cargo of 1,100 tons of ore.

Gray Fleets
The US Navy failed to note what other US federal agencies were approving and now the service must accommodate encroachment by commercial wind turbines into the 47,000 acres of air space of its Boardman Bombing Range in Oregon.

Anybody viewing the flight deck of an aircraft carrier must wonder at its vastness. It looks big enough to house a major sports event. And such will happen in November when the basketball teams of North Carolina and Michigan State compete in a purpose-built, 7,000-person stadium on the carrier USS Carl Vinson, all at no cost to the government.

Iran will respond to the global arrogance of the forces of imperialism by having a strong naval presence near the US sea borders, probably in the Gulf of Mexico. So announced a top Iranian naval officer. But how this would be done has fascinated many. Iran has three inactive destroyers and its several light frigates have a maximum range of 5,000 nautical miles so refueling for a return voyage would be a problem, possibly solved by a cooperative Venezuela. By the way, US officials did not anticipate any port visits by the Iranians.

France withdrew its only aircraft carrier, the Charles de Gaulle, from Libyan operations so the ship could start planned autumn maintenance. Once it enters maintenance, neither Britain nor France will have an operational aircraft carrier.

The Royal Malaysian Navy’s fast attack craft KD Pari nearly sank when one of its shafts pulled out. Fast work got the warship near a jetty, where it did sink. It was soon raised with the use of lifting bags. And the same navy has been a major contributor to the anti-piracy efforts by acquiring a small container ship, the Bunga Mas 5, and converting it into an inexpensive naval auxiliary. Recently, this impromptu warship drove off skiffs approaching the tanker Eagle Stealth in the Strait of Bab-al-Manden.

The firefighting vessel PGK-638, a minor member of Russia’s Caspian navy. collided with the Russian tanker Grigoriy Bugrov in the Volga-Caspian canal. The tanker received a large hole above its waterline but both vessels stayed afloat.

White Fleets
The Hurtigruten is the non-stop stream of about ten semi-cruise ships that serve the remote communities along the coast of Norway. Its Nordlys was about to arrive at Alesund when fire broke in the engine spaces, a fire that killed two and severely burned another two. The ship limped into Alesund, where its 262 passengers debarked and shore-based fire services boarded for what proved to be a difficult fight. At one point, the ship took on a severe list but was finally stabilized to where cars and passenger luggage could be unloaded. A few days later, fleetmate Nordnorge allided with the pier at Bâtsfjord. A hole was punched in the ferry’s hull well above the waterline. The municipality apologized for defects in equipment that let it jut several feet from the pier.

On the Danube, the river cruiseship Primadonna ran aground at low speed and all 150 passengers were evacuated to a nearby hotel.

Those That Go Back and Forth
A member of the British team in the Rugby World Cup took it particularly hard that his team was eliminated in the quarter finals by a French team that had lost two straight times. Perhaps to cool off, he jumped off a ferry in Auckland Harbour and swam to shore. Police warned him about his “disorderly behavior” and the Rugby Football Union fined him £3,000 ($4,660). He agreed that “it was a silly thing” before flying back to the UK.

In the Likoni Channel at Mombasa, the 1,550-passenger ferry Kwale collided with the freighter Sea Wind and then narrowly missed another vessel. Minor injuries to some passengers and the ships, and the ferry was withdrawn from service. In the Philippines, after the Weesam Express 6 had engine problems, the Coast Guard removed all crew and passengers about three hours later – the local Coast Guard had just received the Maritime Industry Authority’s suspension order stopping operation of the company’s five vessels because the Weesam Express 8 ran aground earlier in the month, an accident that left 208 passengers stranded for some time. (Its captain blamed a non-operational lighthouse.)

In Indonesia in eastern Java on the Barito River, the ro/pax ferry Marine Nusantara collided with the tug Pualuat Tiga 330/22 and that killed to least three of the 443 passengers and injured another 113 people. (Indonesia has the greatest number of tugs in the world, seconded by the US.) Elsewhere in the same country, fire broke out on the docked ferry Kirana IX at Surabaya and a resulting panic killed at least eight people and injured scores more. The fire was in a truck loaded with onions and, although badly scorched, it remained drivable.

Residents on Coochiemudlo Island, a small island near Brisbane in Queensland, Australia, depend on barges to carry vehicles back and forth. Last month, both the Sirenia and Megamia failed seaworthiness tests and a smaller barge, the Kooringai Trader, was hurriedly brought in to provide interim daytime service. “Everything that could go wrong has. When it rains, it pours and I can tell you it’s been bucketing down,” explained the ferry company spokeswoman. Also near Brisbane, the ferry Jumpipin ran upon a sand bar near Garden Island and it took about two hours to transfer 98 passengers onto another ferry for the remainder of their trip to the Redland Bay mainland. (The ferry’s name may be a misprint as a Google search failed to bring it up. But jumpinpin is a word of aboriginal origin that refers to the sweetened roots of the wynnum (breadfruit) tree or possibly the pandarus tree.)

Legal Matters
Malaysian authorities spotted the small product tanker Yong An anchored illegally in Malaysian waters. Compounding that illegality, the vessel was flying the Malaysian flag upside down. The master could face up to two years in prison if it can be proven that he deliberately flew the flag that way. (The Malaysian flag is remarkably similar to the US flag and has an unmistakable up” side.)

The owners and operators of the containership Cosco Busan that rammed a pier of the San Francisco-Oakland Bridge in 2007 and dumped much oil have agreed to a civil settlement. They will pay $44.4 million, $18.8 million of which is for lost human uses of the shoreline and Bay.

Four Somalis were sentenced to life in a US prison for their involvement in the hijacking of the sail yacht Quest in the Indian Ocean. The four Americans on the Quest were killed during the hijacking.

Nature
On the face of it, the news report simply stated that the fishing vessel Antonio 23 was overwhelmed by waves and sank while at the Payaw Artificial Reef in the West Philippine Sea and three fishermen were saved by the tanker Mahogany while another 15 were missing. But research showed a certain redundancy in the reef’s name because payaw is the native word for an artificial reef. Such reefs are not the usual collection of deposited junk on the sea bottom that attracts fish and divers. Rather, a payaw is a double-layered bamboo raft under which fish tend to gather to the ultimate benefit of fishermen.

The world’s largest sanctuary for sharks was created by the Republic of the Marshall Islands. No commercial shark fishing is allowed in 768,547 square miles of the Central Pacific, an area about four times that of California.

Heavy rains flood Bangkok and it would be nice if floodwaters passed through the city before the next high tide. One politician tried something novel. He had eight 400-hp tugs tie to a bridge span and then drop back downstream There, they operated at full power for a day. He claimed that flow in the Noi River increased by 57%.

Imports
In one week, Columbian police seized two drug-carrier submarines. The larger one, probably belonging to the guerilla group FARC, can carry ten tons and operate five meters deep for up to ten days. Authorities thought the sub had been used to carry drugs from Columbia to Central America, a transit point for shipments to the US.

Nasties and Territorial Imperatives
Pirates boarded many ships, crews resisted in various ways, and quite often the pirates gave up and left. The crew of the tanker Northern Bell activated its Ship Security Alert System and successfully stayed in the (presumably locked) engineroom. The Pacific Express made evasive maneuvers and its anti-piracy measures thwarted several boarding attempts. As they departed, pirates fired several rockets rounds into the ship and it caught fire. Eventually, the Italian destroyer Andrea Doria came to the rescue and the ship made it to Mombasa. Among the fire losses were seventeen school buses. And in the same general area off Mombasa, anti-piracy measures kept the geared bulker An Ning Jiang from being boarded.

But in the Gulf of Aden, pirates attacked the French catamaran Tribal Kat, killed the owner and dumped his body overboard, and took off with his wife. Forces from the Spanish amphibious warship Galicia rescued her and seven pirates were detained.

Elsewhere, violence was at lower levels. In Sumatra, robbers boarded the tanker Fairchem Birdie in the Dumai Inner Anchorage, threatened a guard, and escaped with some ship’s stores. In Indonesia, robbers boarded the tugboat GM Shine and escaped with the crew’s personal belongings and the ship’s GPS. They disconnected all electronics before departing.

Off Nigeria, the 8,000-ton tanker Kemepade went missing from the Lagos anchorage. About a week later, the ship was found in a shipyard in Ghana with its IMO number removed.

In a move that dismayed many, Spain OK’d use of high-caliber weapons (such as tripod-mounted 12.7-mm heavy machine guns) by non-military vessels at risk from Somali pirates. The move was obviously aimed at protecting the Spanish commercial fishing fleet operating out of the Seychelles. About the same time, Egypt banned carriage of arms through the Suez Canal, and sensitive coastal ports may follow suit.

Odd Bits and Headshakers
Here’s how accidents happen. It was the master’s birthday and maybe everyone celebrated too much but the second mate ran the partly loaded container ship Rena onto Astrolabe Reef, a well-charted and visible danger off the New Zealand port of Tauranga, at 17.8 knots in the early morning. Reportedly, he spotted a radar beacon some twenty miles away that was near the pilot station and he aimed the ship for the beacon without checking a chart for possible obstacles such as Astrolabe Reef. (One is reminded of the stranding of HMS Nottingham at Lord Howe Island in the Tasman because somebody left a divider atop the chart symbol for Wolf Rock.) Soon, the fore part of the ship was hard aground and heavy seas progressively crushed the ship’s double bottom, breaking pipes that leaked bunker oil. The ship’s list increased and containers started breaking away. Then the hull split from one side, probably under the hull, and up the other side. As I write this, the list is 22°, the stern section is wagging like the tail of a dog but may now rest on the bottom, and salvage workers are fighting waves of bad weather in their efforts to remove more oil.

The 104,271-gt bulker BW Odel loaded a cargo of iron ore in Brazil, destination China. But back in May at Mauritius, water was observed pooling on top of the cargo. That could have led to liquefaction of the cargo and that could produce excessive and possibly fatal listing. Due to its deep draft, the ship could not enter Port Louis at Mauritius and must go somewhere before the cyclone season starts. (As this column is written, the ship was still near Port Louis.)

A report stated that the three-masted sail training vessel Concordia was overwhelmed and sank off Brazil last year due to inexperience and lack of action by the ship’s officers. The master claimed that the vessel was hit by a microburst, but the Canadian board decided it was an ordinary squall. All 64 students and staff were rescued well offshore after spending forty hours in a life raft.

The Fleet Air Arm’s Westland Wessex helicopter, XT468, that rescued troops from the fire-stricken landing ship Sir Galahad and went to the aid of the also-fire-stricken, helicopter-carrying merchantman Atlantic Conveyor during the Falklands War was sold to be used as a background prop for laser tag games. When the chopper’s history was learned, it was promoted to become a venue for children’s lunches.

Efforts to differentiate Somali fishermen from Somali pirates continue. The fishermen will be registered and will wear uniforms and carry ID cards.

A company in Sweden discovered that medetomidine, an exotic pharmaceutical usually used to sedate aggressive dogs and immobilize wild cassowary from New Guinea, causes barnacle larvae to go frantic. When small doses are added to bottom paint, the drug is not fatal to the larvae. It just jazzes them enough so that they start swimming whenever they settle on anything and that prevents barnacles from sticking to the bottoms of ships.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Other Shores - October 2011

The number of containers lost at sea is far lower than many believe. It is now estimated that about 350 get overboard each year, rather than the widely accepted figure of 3,000 to 4,000.

Insurers are beginning to seriously worry about what would happen if a tsunami or a hurricane met up with thousands of containers just unloaded or about to be loaded on a super-large container ship. The ship can escape by sailing but what happens to all those stacks of boxes?

Thin Places and Hard Knocks
In the Houston Ship Channel, the 274-meter tanker Naticina and the barge MMI 3024 being pushed by the towboat Alliance collided. A ballast tank on the tanker was breached but none of the barge’s 20,000 barrels of xylene (nasty stuff!) spilled.

The 1977-built, 6,000-hp salvage tug Leopard grounded and partly sank at St Vincent, Porto Grande, near the beach of Galé. (This apparently detailed location may be in the Cape Verde islands off Africa.) A tug failed to unground the bigger tug so it now needs salvaging. In the British Virgin Islands and late at night, the feeder container ship Tropic Sun ran up on rocks near the historic Wreck of the RMS Rhone Park, which was immediately closed to divers and other visitors. The ship was leaving Tortola for St Maarten and was refloated three days later. Recent floods brought much silt down the Mississippi and keeping the river navigable is a problem. The Hong Kong-flagged, coal-carrying bulker Jin Rui went aground at Mile 4 Above Head of the Passes, (this is about 24 miles from the Gulf of Mexico). The master reported hitting “sludge” when the ship’s forward progress started slowing.
A Pakistani dhow carrying petroleum products from Sharjah to Somalia caught fire and seven died while nine others were rescued.

Off Mexico’s Gulf coast, after Tropical Storm Nate disabled the liftboat Trinity II, ten crewmembers climbed into a small rigid-foam life raft after their high-tech raft blew away. Six survived. (A liftboat can lower legs to the sea floor and then elevate itself above the water level. This one was being used as a recording vessel and provided accommodation for the crew, and it was in waters about 25 feet (8 meters) deep.) At Philadelphia, two longshoremen died within eight days. A yard horse (a stubby tractor used for moving containers within a yard) backed into one man and the other fell on a ship while unloading cargo. At Shanghai, a cleaning lady was decapitated when a runaway barge climbed over five smaller vessels and onto a pier. At Manila in the Philippines, a shipping company radio operator finally succeeded. He jumped into the bay but was rescued. He did it again and was rescued again. After a third rescue, fellow employees made him promise not to try again. He promised but walked towards the barge Palawan and jumped from it. The fourth time worked. And the whole sorry process took less than one hour.

In Alaskan waters, the Coast Guard oceangoing buoy tender USCGC Spar small-boated a crewmember off the 82-foot fishing vessel Maverick and carried him more than 200 miles to St Paul Island where he could be flown to Anchorage for further medical care. Maverick is a crab-fishing vessel that is a star on the TV series ‘Deadliest Catch.' Near Saipan in far-warmer waters, the US Coast Guard rescued three fishermen. In Micronesian waters, one expects outrigger canoes and paddles but these three were in the 23-foot fiberglass commercial fishing boat Norma when it took on water and went under. They climbed into their life raft, triggered their EPIRB, and calmly asked for air support. A Coast Guard helicopter spotted a large white cooler and a small rigid-foam life raft bouncing around in 10-foot seas and all three fishermen were hoisted to safety.

At Port Adelaide in Australia, the livestock carrier Al Messilah was declared unseaworthy and its cargo of 67,000 sheep eventually ended upon the Al Shuwaikh, which then headed for Qatar. And Britain’s biggest oil port, Sullom Voe, was forced to close when employee cutbacks meant no vessel traffic services were available because one employee had called in sick and no replacement was still on the payroll.

Gray Fleets
The US Navy relieved the skipper of the destroyer The Sullivans of his command after he mistook a fishing boat for a towed gunnery target off North Carolina. Luckily, the warship’s gunnery proficiency was not yet up to hitting the FV. But a three-admiral panel ruled that the former commanding officer of the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise had committed misconduct and had demonstrated substandard performance when he showed raunchy movies but the panel decided he could continue his long Navy career.

In a nighttime training exercise that involved boarding a moving ship, a 37-year-old Royal Marine died at Portsmouth. Although attached to the vessel by a safety line, he had failed to secure the crotch strap of his utility vest and it rode up and strangled him. Fatigue was thought to be a factor.

Canada’s Conservative government announced that the navy and air force, known for more than three decades as the Maritime Command and Air Command, would revert to their earlier names of Royal Canadian Navy and Royal Canadian Air Force and the announcement greatly surprised many and pleased those who loved those two services. Gone are the days when every military member wore the same green uniform and admirals were generals. Canada’s Land Force Command is now known as the (non-royal) Canadian Army.

The British government is continuing to play “on again, off again” politics with the two big aircraft carriers it is having built. Maybe it won’t necessary after all to mothball one carrier as soon as it is finished.

In April but the news was released only recently, HMS Iron Duke was approached by a speedboat, possibly operated by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, in the Persian Gulf. When the vessel and its two occupants were uncomfortably close, a machine gun on the frigate sprayed the water to one side of the skiff. It quickly veered away with a farewell wave, possibly cheerful, from one occupant. Months later and off the Libyan coast, the frigate fired starshells to illuminate attacks by other NATO forces. The Royal Navy’s three other representatives off Libya, the destroyer HMS Liverpool and helicopters from the assault ship HMS Ocean, also mounted attacks while the minehunter HMS Bangor concentrated on humanitarian tasks.

One of most-expensive sea battles for the Royal Navy was World War One’s battle of the Isle of May although no enemy warships were involved. Twenty miles off Fife Ness on Scotland’s east coast during night-time fleet exercises, a series of collisions killed 270 men within 75 minutes, sank the submarines K17 and K4, and damaged the submarines K6, K7, K14, K22, and the light cruiser Fearless. (The reader really owes it to himself to read up on this pseudo-battle, perhaps at Wikipedia under “battle at May Island.”) Although the K-class subs were operating on the surface that night, they had been designed to accompany the fleet at speed, only submerging when necessary. The problem was that they were steam-powered and submergence meant killing the oil-fueled fires under the boilers, blowing off steam, stowing two funnels, and closing all openings. This took time, and the subs were stifling hot and extremely clumsy to boot. Twenty-seven subs were built (including M-class variants armed with 12-inch guns). None were lost to enemy action but seven succumbed to various causes including several collisions. Now the two sunken subs from the “battle” have been surveyed for the first time because they are war graves in the middle of a windfarm.

White Fleets
A North Korean firm tried running a cruise from China to scenic Mount Kumgang near the South Korea border. The Chinese passengers liked the cruise but not the ship, a 1970’s Japanese veteran named  b i. Cabins were musty, food was served on trays, and there were no showers during the 21-hour trip. A grand finale to this first voyage was when the ship rammed the dock at the North Korean port of Rason, shattering a few yards of concrete. Tugs could have helped dock the ship but the port has no tugs yet.

On the Danube River, the river cruise boat  b i was battered by a cargo ship just south of Passau, Germany. Damage was considerable but nobody was hurt and passengers were transferred to another long, low, two-decked cruise ship, the  b i.

In Alaska, a Coast Guard chopper hoisted a 70-year-old man off the Statendam. He was exhibiting symptoms of congestive heart failure.

Those That Go Back and Forth
Nearly 200 people died in Tanzania after the overloaded ferry Spice Islanders capsized. At least 192 bodies were recovered, while more than 600 passengers survived the accident. The disaster, following on a 2006 capsizing of an overloaded vessel, brought immediate condemnation from survivors and others who feel the ferries were being operated without regard to safety. The Spice Islanders was bound for the island of Pemba in the Indian Ocean, near the island of Zanzibar, the site of the 2006 accident.

At least eleven people, including nine schoolchildren, died when an overloaded ferry capsized in a river in southern China. "It was so crowded we had trouble breathing," one survivor told the paper, adding that she had seen a half-erased notice on the boat saying it was only licensed to carry 32 passengers. Local authorities said 45 people, including two crewmen, were aboard the boat when it became ensnared in a cable and tipped over. But witnesses said there were 92 schoolchildren on the ferry, and one blogger claimed to have counted as many as 63 bodies in the river.

In the Philippines, the fast ferry Express 1 caught fire and the 70 persons on board were safely transferred to a competitor’s ferry, the Sea Jet, which had departed Cebu 35 minutes later. The Express 1 then sank. Off South Korea, the southbound Seolbong caught fire and many passengers jumped overboard before being rescued. No deaths, though. And in New Zealand, another fast ferry caught fire in an engineroom. The Jet Raider was between Auckland and Waiheke Island when the fire started. The 316 passengers were transferred to another ferry, automatic fire extinguishers did their thing, and firemen checked for surviving hot spots with thermal-imaging equipment.

At Nanaimo in British Columbia, you drive onto a ferry by using a curving trestle but it was unusable after a paving truck loaded with asphalt for repaving the passenger walkway broke through the railing and ended up upside-down and submerged. The driver escaped without serious injuries. He had been told where to drive but drove elsewhere and that collapsed the trestle.

A distraught French-speaking woman jumped off the Statue of Liberty ferry Lady Liberty while it was still moored at Battery Park in New York City. She quickly changed her mind, grabbing a life ring thrown to her and waiting for the ferry’s recue boat.

Legal Matters
The Panama Canal Authority ruled that it would no longer allow transit of the Canal by single-hull oil tankers over 600 tons deadweight and under 5,000 tons after December 31, 2012. In the meanwhile, such tankers will be assigned “extraordinary” (PCA language) tug assistance at all locks and through Culebra Cut, at the owner’s expense, of course. “Single-hull” includes single side/single bottom, single side/double bottom, or double side/ single bottom. Other tankers may also be furnished compulsory and extraordinary tug assistance as the Canal prepares for the day when tugs will take all vessels into and through its new set of large locks.

On the River Cam, the irascible owner of a 72-foot barge didn’t like the boat races and repeatedly obstructed them, colliding with some boats, and addressing indecent language at others. He told a judge that he was merely protecting the River’s famed swans, which belong to the Queen, but his ill-temper will cost him about £7,000 in court costs. That sentence posed one small problem. He explained, “I haven’t got the money and only receive £90 in benefits a week. I have no idea where I would get it from.” (The swans need little protection. In fact, one evil bird dubbed "Mr. Asbo" has repeatedly attacked river users including eight-oared shells, went after a father and daughter in a dinghy, and even capsized a canoeist. One suggestion was to clip the feathers on one wing so Mr. Asbo would be unbalanced while attacking.)

In New Zealand, the sailing yacht Classique ignored danger blasts of a horn and skimmed close across the bow of the ferry Seaway II, trusting that the ferry would give way. It did, slowing rapidly and going into reverse, and there was no contact. In court, the yachtie insisted that he had deliberately ignored the international collision-prevention laws, boldly asserting that a customary body of law existed that allowed him to use his own experience and judgment to prevent a collision. The court disagreed and he was fined $4,000 plus costs of another $1,356.

Nature
In this age of global warming, unusual cold weather has been killing some coral reefs in Florida. In January of last year, water temperatures dipped to 51°F (11°C) whereas coral is not usually found in waters below 60°F (16°C). Scientists surveying the US’s only barrier reef, which stretches from Martin County to Key West, found mortality rates far above the rates found after warm-water events such as those that caused coral bleaching in 2005, with rates reached forty percent for some species of coral.

Metal-Bashing
The new British Columbia ship-docking tug Shuswap features two life raft canisters on the roof of the wheelhouse. Each is connected to an arm that can swing out to deploy the raft at water level and close to the tug’s side. The arms fit snugly against the wheelhouse sides and can drop down into slots built in the wheelhouse railings. Credit veteran designer A. G. McIlwain for this clever, and possibly lifesaving, idea. (Al is an old-time designer who still draws vessel plans by hand but his ideas are very contemporary.)

A Russian court seized an almost-finished floating nuclear power station. Oh it’s safe enough but the builder is in bankruptcy and the undelivered barge unit is a $340-million asset of the yard.


Nasties and Territorial Imperatives
Pirates released seven Danish yachtsmen, hijacked in February in the Indian Ocean while sailing their 43-foot yacht Ing. Reportedly, a $3 million ransom was dropped on the bulk carrier Dover where the Danes were being held hostage. They were given a small boat with an outboard engine and set free. A few miles away, a Danish warship was waiting to pick them up. The Danish family consisted of two adults, three children, and two deckhands. Reportedly, the ransom would have been waived if one pirate could have married the 13-year-old daughter.

The chemical/oil tanker Fairchem Bogey was seized by pirates while anchored at the Omani port of Salalah, two miles off the coast and well inside Omani territorial waters. An attack so close to a port is unusual for Somali pirates, although they have been driven back to waters around the Gulf of Aden and coast of Oman because of the ongoing Indian Ocean monsoon. The hijacking is the latest in a series of attacks against oil tankers. That sector may now be specifically targeted because ransoms are much-higher-than-average for oil and gas carriers.

The Somali businessman who negotiated possible ransoming of four US citizens held hostage on the high seas (they were later killed on their yacht Quest by the pirates) and arranged for the ransom paid for the German-owned bulker Marida Marguerite is as much a pirate as any skiff operator with an AK-47 and a boarding ladder. So argued US prosecutors and the Somalian was indicted on 15 counts by a US federal grand jury. (His cut of the Marguerite ransom was about $30,000 to $50,000.)

Odd Bits
A Hollywood personage has been in the UK filming a TV series featuring his barge, the Princess Matilda. He and his wife were on the River Medway, a river they knew well, but they were overtired and bedazzled by lights on shore and they turned the wrong way. A RNLI crew receiving training in their boathouse overheard radio discussions about the couple’s bewilderment and launched a lifeboat for a successful rescue.

The 100-foot monohull maxi sailboat Rambler 10, valued at somewhere between $10 and 14 million, was leading its division in the prestigious 608-mile Fastnet Race when its canting keel dropped off. The boat immediately flipped, dumping the crew of 21 in the water for several hours. The vessel’s EPIRB failed to work (but it did start some ten hours later!) and it was a crewmember’s personal emergency position indicating beacon that alerted Irish and British rescuers. The mastless, keeless vessel was towed to Bantry Bay and righted after several attempts. The mast was located on the seabed and it, sail bags, and personal possessions were later retrieved by divers.

The US has several large icebreakers but they are often out of service or are committed elsewhere so the National Science Foundation has to rent an icebreaker for about $8 million to keep channels open to its research stations in the Antarctic such as that at McMurdo Sound. Last year, it was the Swedish icebreaker Oden. Starting at the end of December, it will be the Russian breaker Vladimir Ignatyuk. This vessel was originally constructed as the Arctic Kalvik in Victoria, BC in 1983, and was sold by Gulf Canada to Murmansk Shipping in 2003. A similar sister vessel, the Terry Fox, is now a Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker.

Feet keep washing ashore on the West Coast, mostly in British Columbia, but authorities are not particularly concerned. Eight feet have been found in the Vancouver area since 2007, with another three on Washington beaches. DNA tests showed that two came from the same woman, four were from known missing persons, and none could be demonstrated to be result of foul play. Most of the feet were wearing some kind of shoe, usually a sneaker or running shoe, and the footwear provided flotation for the feet. Authorities surmised that region’s many bridges may have inspired suicides and noted that feet probably became separated from legs much as corpses on land fall apart due to decomposition and the actions of scavengers.


Head-Shakers
An Australian Navy seaman claimed the Navy failed to detect that she was pregnant when she enlisted and that medical staff ignored her when she told them on three occasions that she had missed her period. She wants the Navy to help support her child.

The Finnish 28-metre excursion boat King routinely carries passengers around Helsinki harbor but it ran aground because the master was stuck in a bathroom due to a jammed door. Minor injuries to some of 54 passengers and cosmetic damage to the vessel and, worst of all, the Finnish Coast Guard was investigating whether the master’s actions were criminal!

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Other Shores -September 2011

Other Shores                                              

US crude oil imports in the year’s first half fell to the lowest monthly average (8.8 million barrels per day) since 2000.

Traditionally, this is the busiest time of year for container ships but rates are down 9.3 percent since April due to the lessened demand for consumer goods for the back-to-school and holiday seasons. Last year at this time, rates surged 56 percent.

DNV, one of the major classification societies, sponsored a summer study by students, who concluded that major advances in technology, improved standards, and increased Arctic research are needed. About 25 percent of the world’s undiscovered petroleum resources are in the Arctic. (The contradiction inherent in that word “undiscovered” bothers me.) 

What happened to the surface oil slick from that massive Gulf of Mexico spill more than a year ago? A report revealed that microbes residing within the surface oil slick ate the oil five times more effectively than microbes outside the slick. Not only that, but the wee beasties did not seem to require much in the way of necessary nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus, elements scarce in the spilled oil. In addition, the microbes’ respiration produced carbon dioxide and energy but they did not seem to use the energy – certainly not for replication! Scientists are puzzled but it’s reassuring when unexpected friends show up to help us humans.

Thin Places and Hard Knocks
In India, traditionally inefficient and lax Mumbia officials have stopped fooling around! They arrested the master and chief engineer of the Rak Carrier after the coal-carrying bulker sank some twenty miles offshore because “they were directly responsible for the vessel” and pollution from its bunkers was feared. (There was a spill, but that is not news in that part of the world.) In reaction to the sinking, the Gujarat Maritime Board, a state authority responsible for 1,600 km of coastline and several ports including Mumbia, banned all ships over 25 years of age. A floating drydock capsized and sank, reported Suez Canal authorities, adding that the two vessels in the dry dock had been raised. In Thailand’s Udom Harbor, the freighter Unison Vego was trying to anchor when its engine stopped. Momentum carried the vessel into the moored Ocean Tower, which slowly sank. It carried heavy machinery and some was salvaged as the ship settled lower and lower but most went under.
Near St Just (it’s in Cornwall), the container ship Karin Schepers ran onto the beach east of the Pendeen lighthouse but freed itself off before a rescue helicopter arrived.

The 3,225-dwt freighter Salmo managed to hit the quay at Brake in the Lower Saxony region of Germany. The master was fined 1000 euros and the vessel was detained during an investigation. 

(Wordplay about a possible cause of the accident and port’s name is permissible.) In southern Philippines waters, the Bulk Carrier 1 (probably a bulk carrier) sank after being in violent contact with the HS Puccini. Two engineers of the bulker died when trapped below. On the Rhine River, travel was messed-up for some time. A gravel-carrying barge sank between St. Goar and Bingen and that blocked the river. Then a second aggregate-carrying barge ran aground near Trechtinghausen, luckily outside of shipping lanes. A third barge, this one carrying ethanol, drifted out of the channel while waiting for the first barge to be removed and it too went aground.

While near Port Georgetown (this Port Georgetown may be in Guyana), a crewmember on the car carrier Global Leader died when a rescue boat collapsed onto him. Another man was seriously hurt.
Six hundred miles south New Zealand the Australian-owned, New Zealand-chartered fishing vessel Janas, longlining for the Patagonian toothfish, had engine problems. Emergency repairs failed so the Australian icebreaker Aurora Australis came to the rescue. It towed the FV to remote Macquarie Island where better repairs were made in the lee of the island. Then a female crewperson on the icebreaker had severe stomach pains so two New Zealand-based helicopters flew out nearly 500 km and got the woman to the Dunedin Hospital for a probable appendectomy. 

At the Black Sea port of Constantza, the bulker FGM Europe caught fire while under repair. The bridge and accommodations took a beating.

A SWAT team of police boarded the product tanker Al Mahboobah off the Portuguese coast after the master radioed that his crew had mutinied and threatened to kill him. The SWAT team took the ship into Lisbon to sort out what had happened.

The LPG tanker DP Proteus lost its propeller off Vietnam and started drifting toward a reef. The local Vietnamese tug Phu My 03 was dispatched, as was the deep-sea tug Pacific Hickory from Singapore, and the similar-sized tanker DP Azalea was chartered to stand by. The Phu My 03 was towing the vessel clear of the reef when the Pacific Hickory arrived and took over. The tow headed for Shanghai, but entry there was denied (perhaps due to the tanker’s dangerous cargo) and so the tow headed for South Korea. All to replace a lost propeller! (The Pacific Hickory is one of my favorite tugs. Formerly the Irving Miami and based in eastern Canada, the big Dominican-flagged tug pops up in almost any part of the world, almost always towing some large object.) 

Gray Fleets
The Australian Navy, unfortunately, managed to keep itself in the headlines. A RHIB overturned while transferring personnel from the patrol boat HMAS Maitland to the frigate HMAS Darwin and five members of the Defence Force Remuneration Tribunal needed hospitalization. And sex reared its ugly head once again on the supply ship HMAS Success when a female crewmember claimed she had been ambushed in a storeroom and sexually assaulted. She reported the incident to Navy officials and then went ashore and told Sydney police. The assault came only months after a report had revealed the existence of a predatory culture of sexual misconduct fueled by alcohol and drugs on the same ship.
Canada had its own share of naval problems. The submarine HMCS Cornerbrook struck the bottom while on an advanced submarine officer training exercise. It was Canada’s only operational member of Canada’s four submarines at the time. Repairs to sister-sub HMCS Windsor in 2010 alone cost almost three times the budgeted C$17 million – bad hull welds, broken torpedo tubes, a faulty rudder, and acoustical tiles that kept falling off. And the Navy also spent thousands trying to keep pigeons from roosting in the long-idled sub.

A female officer will command a Royal Navy warship for the first time. Promoted to Commander, she will take command of the frigate HMS Portland next April after commanding the minehunters HMS Pembroke, HMS Ramsey, and HMS Penzance

The Chinese Navy’s first aircraft carrier, formerly the Soviet carrier Varyag, went to sea for a short trial. Unlike the practice in the US Navy, where an aircraft carrier’s skipper is never an aviator, the first commanding officer of the yet-as-unnamed carrier is Li Xiaoyan, a top-rated naval flyer. Elsewhere, the former Soviet carrier Kiev is nearing completion as a luxury hotel that is expected to open later this year. Progress is at the internal-decorations stage. Pre-hotel, the carrier, moored at a theme park, was rated as attraction 33 of 158 attractions in or near Tianjin.

The US Navy has asked industry to come up with a large unmanned submarine able to operate in the open sea or in coastal waters and harbors on missions lasting more than seventy days.  The missions, of course, involve gathering intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance. This LDUUV (Large Displacement Unmanned Underwater Vehicle) would be pier-launched and recovered (“door to door,” as it were) and would perform over-the horizon sensor missions in coastal waters and harbors. The program has two phases. In the first, hardware and software must be developed for missions lasting up to thirty days at depths from 100 to 400 feet. The Navy may provide a UUV prototype. 

In the second phase, missions would last more than seventy days without human interaction. The UUV must avoid all vessels in the area, detect stationary and moving objects and avoid them, detect and identify surface vessels and their intent, and avoid all kinds of fishing nets and gear including monofilament lines and twine nets. The program may take five years.

A company press release announced that the US Navy had lifted the veil of secrecy from its Ghost. It is a super-cavitating combination aircraft/boat that flies through an artificial underwater gaseous environment with 900 times less friction than water. The stealth craft was built at no cost to the government and the company expects it will have a great impact in many nautical matters. 

White Fleets
Bookings during the upcoming Rugby World Cup competition in New Zealand are disappointing operators of several cruise ships. For example, the Rhapsody of the Seas has resorted to selling half-price tickets (to New Zealand residents only) that combine accommodations, meals, entertainment, and a voyage around the North Island between matches.

At Key West, while trying to dock, the Carnival Fantasy managed to bump moored fleetmate Carnival Imagination. Cosmetic damage only. (Since one ship was immobile, it was, strictly speaking, an allision, not a collision.) 

One doesn’t think of large waves on the Volga River but the river system does incorporate large lakes in many places. And it was large waves that reportedly caused the multi-decked river cruise ship Bulgaria to sink in 66 feet of water. That cost 122 people (including 28 children) their lives in Russia’s worst maritime disaster since 1986. When the vessel was raised, investigators surmised that one engine may have failed because the steering wheel was found to be turned hard right and one engine had been asked to deliver full power. The accident had immediate repercussions. A criminal case was launched against the captains of the freighters Dunaysky 6 and Arbat for failing to take part in the rescue, a check-up of cruise ships found out that 90 percent failed to meet basic safety requirements and so twenty-three vessels were banned from operating as passenger ships, and prosecutors initiated sixty-six administrative cases against vessel owners. 

Top of Form
Only three weeks later, and infuriating Russian bureaucracy at the highest levels about the shocking state of that nation’s standards of maritime safety, the excursion boat Lastochka (Swallow) ran into a moored barge on the Moscow River. The allision killed nine partyers. The operator, who was also killed, had been fined three times this year for operating an overloaded vessel.

Those That Go Back and Forth
The British Columbia ferry Burrard Beaver struck the dock at Vancouver. The ferry was a half-boat length away when it lost power and steering and then veered to starboard and slammed into the dock. A nearby tug was able to get the ferry to its berth and there were no injuries to the 215 passengers. The Turkish ferry Ishan Alyanak sank at Izmir after the vessel struck the pier. The ferry with 250 passengers was approaching the pier when the rudder failed, resulting in the allision. There may have been some panic on board but everyone reached the pier safely. (A report stated that a fire in the stern section might have led to the rudder failure.) 

In New Zealand, the Marlborough Sounds ferry Straitsman had to stop and anchor for a couple of hours while repairs were made to a fuel pump. The fifty passengers on board may have enjoyed the pause and it is certain that the freight and vehicles didn’t care either way.

In India’s Goa region, the ferry on the Kirianpani-Aronda route broke down so hundreds of market-goers had to use a motorized canoe carrying only ten to thirteen at a time. In the Philippines, the ro/pax ferry Asia Malaysia sank off Calabasa Island after cargo shifted to one side in high winds and waves. All 107 passengers and 44 crewmembers were saved. The Government promptly suspended all operations by the ferry owners’ vessels. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, a ferry carrying at least 200 passengers on the Tshuapa River sank after colliding with a wooden cargo vessel. Both craft were operating without lights and the cargo boat was not allowed to operate at night. At least 80 died. 

Nature
The Russians have two Arctic white beluga whales in captivity somewhere and wanted them to become used to humans swimming with them. One problem was that the whales shied away from contact with white diving suits so a 36-year-old Russian woman scientist named Natalie Davis Senke volunteered for the familiarization job. Naked, the yoga expert dove into water just above freezing and stayed under for up to ten minutes, thanks to her practice of doing rigorous meditation and breath-control exercises. The whales seemed to enjoy her company as she swam among them.

The operator of the Great Lake’s last steam-powered ferry, the Badger, asked officials in Michigan and Wisconsin to support its plea for an additional five-year exemption from the federal ban on dumping coal ash into Lake Michigan. The company is exploring the use of compressed natural gas. 

Metal-Bashing
Progress is being made in the UK on construction of two large aircraft carriers. The AMT Trader, one of the world’s largest barges, carried a 9,000-ton section of the future Queen Elizabeth from a Glasgow-area shipyard at Govan around Scotland to the Edinburgh–area yard at Rosyth, where it will be mated with other sections as they arrive or are constructed. For those interested in comparisons, that single chunk is heavier than one of the Royal Navy’s new Type 45 destroyers.

A report surmised that amalgamating the naval shipbuilding programs of Germany and France could create the biggest industrial partnership since armament-giant EADS was formed in 2000. The thinking was that Thyssen-Krupp, Germany’s largest steelmaker, would combine nicely with France’s naval shipyard DCNS. But ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems quickly squelched the idea, stating that it is not planning a joint venture with the French shipyards group, nor are there any plans for a merger or other partnership or alliance with French shipyards. (ThyssenKrupp recently cancelled a deal with Abu Dhabi MAR to set up a joint venture to sell naval surface ships to the Middle East and North Africa, blaming changes in the political landscape.)

Owners of supertankers have been torn between making some money in these hard times by scrapping their older tankers or keeping them in service although rates have dropped so low that some owners are effectively paying clients $1,037 dollars a day.

The over-aged (built 1974) product tanker Phoenix was slowly making its way towards a scrapping yard in India when its engine failed and it anchored somewhere off South Africa. Authorities, fearful of a possible pollution event, got a promise from the owner, reportedly a Lagos firm, to send a tug but it never appeared and subsequent phone calls were not answered. That meant that no insurance was available if anything happened so authorities prepared for a judicial sale. As expected, bad weather did arrive and the tanker’s anchor rode snapped. The deep-sea tug Smit Amandla, one the largest tugs in the world, attempted to connect a towline to pull the Phoenix to deeper water, but weather conditions made this impossible. Pushed by waves, the vessel struck bottom some 200 meters from the shore near Christmas Bay, north of Durban. Helicopters airlifted all fifteen of the Indian crew to safety. Three attempts to tow the 538-foot ship off the rocky beach failed and work shifted to removing the oil on board. 

Nasties and Territorial Imperatives
Think of Libya and Gaddafi, rebels, and oil probably come to mind. The Libyan tanker Cartagena belonging to a government-owned tanker company was anchored on Hurd’s Bank just outside of Malta’s territorial waters when a rebel-manned tugboat approached and captured the tanker and its cargo of 70,000 tons of gasoline. A Maltese Armed Forces patrol boat was nearby but took no action. Back in March, rebels similarly captured another Libyan-owned tanker.

Odd Bits and Headshakers
Many Viking ships succumbed to the cruelties of a sea voyage (witness the folk song “Sir Patrick Spens” and its “half o’er, half o’er to Aberdour lies guid Sir Patrick Spens wi’ the Scotch lairds at his feet” – yes, I know he was a Scot but he was sailing on a mission to his king’s liege lord in Norway and I suspect his vessel was Viking-like). Replicas of Viking ships also sink. The 2009-built Norwegian longship Dragens Vinge (as might be expected, that translates as the wing of the dragon) went under fifty miles east of Shetland. But its sailors had advantages their ancestors lacked. Modern technology, in the form of an EPIRB, lifeboats, helicopters and a liferaft, helped save the seven pseudo-Vikings. Weather at the time was force 7 to gale force 8. Replicas of Viking ships are surprisingly common. An entry in Wikipedia lists thirty-three and the list does not include the late Dragens Vinge.

In Australia, two young buckos cavorted around on a jetski until they chose to go around the back side of Flinders Island because a tugboat towing a big ship was blocking their way. They ran onto unseen rocks and were swept onto the island as their jetski was washed off the rocks and out to sea. Luckily, one man had grabbed his cellphone from a compartment on the jetski. His call brought a rescue helicopter. The mobile was an iPhone in a watertight plastic bag.

When Osama bin Laden’s body was flown out to the carrier USS Carl Vinson, officials wanted to make sure the body bag held the right body. The bag was unzipped and photos were taken but no ruler was available to measure the 6’4” corpse. So a six-foot-tall SEAL lay besides the corpse. Reports stated that the volunteer was about four inches shorter than he who had not volunteered. 

Has anyone noticed that the first races of the America’s Cup World Series are being held somewhere off Portugal? Does anyone care? For those that do care, there are eight boats from seven nations – the US, New Zealand, Sweden, China, South Korea, Italy, and two from France.) Next races in the Series will be held in the United Kingdom, and then at San Francisco. Later venues are to be announced. Then comes the Louis Vuitton Cup series in 2013 to determine the challenger. It will race the defending champion, the US’s Oracle, off Newport, Rhode Island in 2013 to decide which nation will keep the Cup for a while.

While racing off the Isle of Wight, the yacht Atlanta of Chester ignored multiple provisions of the Rules of the Road and an oncoming 869-foot large orange object. It bounced off the bulbous bow of the tanker Hanne Knutsen and then the tanker’s port anchor hooked the yacht’s hot-pink spinnaker and that pulled down the yacht’s mast as the yacht ground along the tanker’s side. The yacht was the give-way vessel but many have wryly noted that some yachties seem to feel that their racing always gives them precedence over any other vessel.


Thursday, July 28, 2011

Other Shores - August 2011

Wallet-restraint by US consumers has kept US import volume flat, but experts expect a rise by summer’s end when retailers build up inventories.

Will LNG shipping rates rise? At least one shipping company thinks so. It turned down a one-year charter at $125,000 a day of its newbuild LNG carrier Stena Crystal Sky, preferring a daily rate of $110,000 over only 210 days.


If you own a capesize bulker hauling iron ore from Australia to China, you have been enjoying the record rate of more than $8 per ton. 

Oil giant Shell applied to US regulators for permission to drill six wells in the Chukchi Sea. Permission was granted, perhaps because polar bears were recently re-categorized as merely “threatened” rather than “endangered.”

More than forty percent of about 600 Dutch and British mariners have personally experienced bullying, harassment, or discrimination at work within the last five years. Less than half felt they could make a complaint.

Thin Places and Hard Knocks
As usual, there were collisions and allisions: The container ships CCNI Rimac and CSAV Petorca collided at Shanghai and a fire started on the Rimac when water reacted with inflammable goods in a container. The crew was evacuated and the ship was moved outside the port while authorities looked for twenty-six of its containers that had fallen into the sea. 

Ships ran aground: While being towed to a scrapping beach at Alang, the cargo vessel Wisdom broke free and ended up in Mumbai’s Jubal Beach. After three attempts, it was freed by two powerful tugs. In Indonesia, the crew of 28 manning the bulker Sunny Partners were rescued by a tug after it ran aground while on a voyage with a cargo of bauxite. In Indonesia again, the container ship Al Rawday ran aground near the Rock Island Chain at Sambu Batam and the chief engineer had a fatal heart attack during the incident. The ship had just left Malaysia’s Port Klang.

Fires and explosions took a toll: While discharging cargo at Luanda, fire broke out on the UAL Antwerp, probably in a tank of kerosene. Due to the firefighters’ extensive efforts, the ship took on so much water that it was beached to keep it from sinking. The cooling unit on a Dutch semi-trailer burst into flame on the ro/ro ferry Schleswig-Holstein en route from Puttgarden to Rodby but a deckhand on routine patrol spotted the fire and extinguished it. The container ship APL Chiwan suffered from main-engine camshaft problems off the coast of China but they were fixed. Two days later, an engine fire disabled the ship. A tug was called for a 100-mile tow to Hong Kong while onboard generators continued to power the coolers on refrigerated containers. 

Unusual things happened: Inland sand pits often use floating dredges and the Robert R Woodington lost its cutterhead and ladder when an underwater landslide occurred. What to do? Hire a marine salvage company to recover the head, now 100 feet deep and covered by more than 70 feet of sand and clay mix. The successful recovery team included five divers, a sectional barge with a crane, and airlift and jetting equipment. At Algeciras in Spain, the 509-TEU feeder ship Deneb flopped on its starboard side at a wharf for unknown reasons. In Israel, the bulker Avramit spilled oil on the coral beach between Marina and the border of a coral reserve. The oil was quickly pumped up and the Gulf of Eilat was spared further pollution. In Rotterdam’s Caland Canal, the bunker tanker Vialis embarrassed itself by breaking in half while refueling the chemical/oil tanker Marida Mimosa. At Beirut, a shore crane unloading the Laguna collapsed across the Darya, seriously damaging that ship. Both are small cargo ships.

Humans were rescued: Although the vessel owner said there was no emergency, the master of the small tanker Pavit disagreed and used e-mail to ask for help. As a result, Falmouth Coastguard in the UK coordinated the removal of thirteen Indian crewmen off the vessel, which had been drifting for several days about 120 miles off Oman with mechanical problems and a crew growing increasingly seasick. A helicopter from the frigate HMS St Albans made 27 trips to transfer the Pavit’s crew to the Indian tanker Jag Pushpa, which agreed to repatriate the men to India. Off Long Island, a Coast Guard small boat took a sick sailor off the USS Oak Hill (LSD-51) after he was disabled by abdominal pains. In Alaska near Valdez a Coast Guard chopper took the chief engineer off the 150-foot tug Sea Voyager. He was also suffering from abdominal pains. Another Alaska-based helicopter took a fisherman off the 50-foot fishing vessel Heidi Linea. He had bad back pains from a fall on the FV. 

Gray Fleets
Thou shalt lead a pure life. The US Navy has dismissed at least 29 commanding officers in the last two years. Included were nine commanding officers for sexual harassment or inappropriate relationships in the last 18 months. Three others were dismissed for alcohol offenses and two others for personal misconduct. And the Navy is currently investigating reports of hazing on the submarine USS Tennessee. Meanwhile, in Alaska, details were released on why the commanding officer of the Coast Guard patrol boat USCGC Anacapa was relieved of his command earlier this year. He had tried to get the vessel underway while intoxicated.

Soviet warships operated openly off the Virginia coast. They were part of a two-week-long international exercise originally designed to lessen Cold War tensions. Other participating nations were France, the UK, and the US.

The British destroyer HMS Liverpool has been having an eventful tour off Libya in Operation Unified Protection. In May it was under attack by forty rockets and her 4.5-inch main gun returned fire on the rocket battery near Misrata – the first time the main guns of a British warship have been fired in anger since Iraq in 2003. Then it used its 4.5-inch gun again, this time to thwart an attempt by four Libyan boats (three rigid hulls and one small boat) to disrupt shipping in the Gulf of Sirte. At least one boat was destroyed.

The Philippines will no longer buy second-hand naval equipment from the US but might lease relatively new US equipment rather than wait for surplus material to become available. Announced object of the new policy? To make the Philippines into a strong US ally. (The Philippines still uses WW II-vintage ex-US destroyers.) That nation also rebranded the South China Sea as the West Philippine Sea, thus mimicking the US’s recent renaming of the Persian Gulf as the Arabian Gulf.
Want to buy some surplus military and naval stuff? Australia is selling up to 24 ships, 180 aircraft, 600 armored vehicles, 12,000 other vehicles, and so on. The proceeds will, hopefully, help pay for a massive $61 billion planned upgrade of the Ozzie defense forces. 

Where better way to train boarding teams than on a WW II-vintage museum steamship? Florida Coast Guardsmen used the SS American Victory as a training arena while it was moored at The American Victory Ship Mariners Memorial Museum at Tampa.

China is hell-bent on getting aircraft carriers. Photos showed concrete replicas of a carrier superstructure and a jump-jet flight deck, both far inland. The half-built ex-Soviet carrier Varyag, which a Chinese businessman bought with the announced goal of converting it into a floating casino, was taken over by the government and it will become China's first aircraft carrier. And several Chinese businessmen have put in bids for the retired British carrier Ark Royal, with the announced intentions of converting it into a floating showcase for high-technology items. (Two other ex-Soviet carriers, the Kiev and Minsk, are now parts of Chinese military theme parks.

Last year, the US Navy acquired 59,000 Chinese-made microchips, each counterfeit and each equipped with a “back door” that could allow nasty tricks such as admitting signals to shut-off the chip. 

Women will be allowed to man Royal Navy subs now that fears that fumes might affect fetuses carried by pregnant submariners have been allayed. Other nations allowing female subbies are the US, Australia, Canada, Denmark, Sweden, and Norway.

A Royal Navy commander failed to notify the education authority that he had separated from his wife of twenty years and thus he was able to illegally accept nearly £75,000 to send his two children to a boarding school.

It won’t help US unemployment figures shoreside but about 3,000 US Navy sailors will be released as surplus to decreasing needs. They will get no severance package and no retirement since most will not have served long enough to qualify.

White Fleets
The 122,400-ton cruise ship Celebrity Silhouette was floated-out at an inland German shipyard and needed to be taken to the North Sea Dutch port of Eemshaven for completion. The 26-mile route involved a narrow, winding river, several very tight spots with less than five feet of clearance, and passage through a railroad bridge that was too narrow for the vessel. (A crane on a barge created just enough room by removing the bridge’s center span and moving it out of the way.) And the ship had to be moved backwards. Two tugs, one at each end of the cruise ship, slowly towed the vessel with little fuss and great precision, and the voyage was safely made. Why not? The demanding routine was familiar since the Silhouette was the fourth of its class to be built at the German yard. 

Small events can cause major problems. The elderly (1952) cruise ship Philippines (ex-Augustus) had a fire in its stack while moored at Manila. The blaze was quickly quelled and an investigation revealed that the fire originated in the DC generator in the stack and was caused by someone closing ventilation flaps. That allowed heat to build up inside the funnel until ignition was reached. 

Those cruise ships that can’t fit under the Sydney Harbor Bridge have been using the one-cruise-ship berth at the Circular Quay but it really isn’t a cruise-ship terminal. Australian authorities are considering use of the nearby navy base at Garden Island even though it is busy with navy activities.

Those That Go Back and Forth
Patronage of a new East River ferry service in New York City that linked Manhattan, Queens, and Brooklyn (three of the City’s five boroughs) was pleasingly high because it was free. Then a ticket started costing $4 and patronage dropped to one half, Officials, however, were pleased with that number. It was higher than they had expected.

The Alaskan ferry Malaspina has a bow lookout on duty at all times. The ferry was near the eastern shore of Taiya Island and approaching Skagway when the bow lookout, in what was probably the quietest spot on the vessel, heard a faint call for help. All hands including the 45 passengers started searching the shore, a searchlight finally illuminated an injured man, and he was taken onboard. He was bleeding from multiple gashes, had two large swollen areas on his body, and was semi-conscious and dry-heaving. He also had no memory of what had happened (he probably had been hiking and had fallen down a cliff into the water and managed to pull himself ashore). When spotted, he was preparing to re-enter the water and swim toward the Malaspina.

High winds and heavy seas capsized a ferry in a bay west of Haiti’s capital and seven people went missing. The boat was transporting charcoal, bananas, and other goods to Archaie, a coastal town thirty miles northwest of Port au Prince. In Bangladesh, the Madinar Alo capsized in the Sitalakhya River and at least a dozen of more than 100 passengers died. In Indonesia ten people including two children died when their canoe sank in the Bengawan River in East Java. They were simply trying to get to their village on the other bank. At Charlotte Amalie, in the US Virgin Islands, the 89-foot fast catamaran ferry Royal Miss Belmar ran up high and dry on a rocky point. That crash injured five, including a baby, of the 102 people aboard. 

Those that carried fireworks onto a Washington State ferry around the date of the Fourth of July may have noted that explosives-sniffing dogs were active at the ferry terminal. They also learned that carrying legal fireworks onto the ferry was OK.

Legal Matters
The Chinese master of the bulker Full City is lucky and one might say he beat the current trend of criminalizing mariners for accidents. A Norwegian appeals court overturned a lower-court decision that he must serve mandatory jail time and instead substituted a suspended sentence. The second mate, also sentenced to jail, was acquitted by the appeals court. (The Full City ran aground off Telemark during a summer storm and the grounding released oil that became the worst oil spill in Norwegian history.) 

A Macedonian court jailed two men for a year because of a boating accident on Lake Ohrid in 2009 in which fifteen Bulgarian tourists died. Their offenses were allowing overcrowding and issuing false safety certificates. 

Nature
Researchers searching for the Pacific Ocean’s proverbial Great Garbage Patch of floating plastic, a patch reported as being twice the size of Texas and somewhere between California and Japan, found it hard to find and far less dense than reported. Scientists often could not see much plastic from the deck of their research vessel. “The amount of plastic out there isn’t trivial but the patch is a small fraction of the state of Texas, not twice the size,” reported one scientist. And the patch is not growing exponentially, as was earlier reported.

In New Zealand, a young humpback whale swam into a Tory Channel mussel-farming operation and became so entangled that it became exhausted. The mussel-farmers moved a barge alongside the whale and it was utterly passive during the 45 minutes it took to cut the whale free with the help of a crane on the barge.

A massive underwater landslide 200 miles off Cornwall caused a minor but measurable tsunami along the UK’s south coast. Wave heights were measured as being between 05 and 0.8 meters.

The North Atlantic island of Rockall is exceedingly unattractive to most people, being 82-feet wide, 101-feet long, and 68-feet high and 187 miles from the nearest land, and the highest waves in the world (95 feet) were measured nearby. Nevertheless, a Yorkshireman plans to spend a night on the island to replace a brass plaque left there in 1955 and re-establish Britain’s ownership of the island. (There is a four-way dispute between the UK, Ireland, Iceland, and the Faroe Islands over ownership.) By the way, his name is Strangeway.

Metal Bashing
The 1960-built tanker Wenjiang was launched as the British Curlew for BP Tanker Co. It was shelled and abandoned in 1980 during the Iran/Iraq war while at Basrah. Apparently it stayed afloat and managed to end up Bandar Abbas in Iran. Someone decided that nobody really owned the tanker, took over ownership, a tug appeared, and the tow headed for Pakistan and scrapping. The real owners are unhappy.

China’s largest shipyard will expand into green recycling by erecting the world’s largest dismantling facility. It should be capable of dismantling about 75 ships a year that range in size from about 50,000 dwt to a VLCC-like 300,000 dwt.

Nasties and Territorial Imperatives
Due to the monsoon season, Somali pirates left open waters and concentrated their activities in the southern Red Sea and off the coast of Oman. Somali fishermen reminded everyone that they too carry AK-47s but just for self-defense against the real pirates. (If a fishing skiff’s equipment includes a boarding ladder and several RPG’s, it’s probably a pirate vessel.) And Somali pirates did something unusual: they rescued nineteen crewmembers from the cargo vessel Orna after it caught fire. No word whether they were held for ransom.

Odd Bits
Prince William and his new bride visited Canada and their progression has been much more sedate than the last time Canada was visited (in 1786) by another Royal Navy officer and heir to the throne with the name of William. That William, later King William IV, could be a rousterer (his several visits to Halifax while a junior officer are still prominent parts of local history) and he fathered several illegitimate children, including ten by one actress/mistress. (He would have married her but descendants of George II were forbidden to marry unless they obtained the reigning monarch's consent.)

Last summer, Canadian government searchers discovered the Arctic exploration ship HMS Investigator, which sank in 1854 off Banks Island. This summer, the same people hope to find HMS Terror and HMS Erebus, the heart of Sir John Franklin’s abortive 1854 expedition to discover the Northwest Passage. The vessels are Canada’s only national historic sites with no known location. Noted one searcher, Even if they are not found, “next time the team will know where not to look.”
A major problem for shipping companies and port operators is that shippers too often mislabel the weight or contents of containers, and that practice has resulted in a number of accidents. (When the MSC Napoli was grounded, it was found that the declared weights for 137 of the 600 shipping containers on its deck differed from actual weights by more than three tons.) The major shipping companies are organizing a Cargo Incident Notifications Network called Cinsnet (perhaps it would be better labeled as Sinsnet?) to help identify both potentially dangerous containers and industry-wide trends.

The following may tell readers something about the so-called “warrior complex.” The Navy SEALS that killed Osama bin Laden referred to him as “Geronimo” while those insiders at the Pentagon and the CIA preferred “Cakebread.”

Coal from Indonesia has been catching fire while being carried to China so one insurance company issued a simple checklist. Coals are ranked from anthracite, bituminous, and sub-bituminous down to lignite (aka brown coal). Indonesia mostly exports the lower-ranked coals, which tend to self-ignite. Shipments often have a high moisture content, which is a no-no. 

Upon hearing an electronic emergency signal one night, British coastguard authorities launched a lifeboat and searched for three hours some four miles off the Welsh coast before it was realized that the signal had been transmitted by a standard electronic device in a BMW parked on the ferry European Endeavour inbound from Dublin. This Emergency Telematics anti-theft, send-help device is fitted to many new BMW and Volvo vehicles.

Per international agreement, the longer a vessel, the lower must be the pitch of its horn. If longer than 200 meters, its horn must issue a sound between 70 and 200 Hertz. For lengths between 75 and 200 meters, the sound should be between 130 and 350 Hz, and between 20 and 75 meters, the pitch must be an almost squeaky 250-700 Hz. (To establish a baseline here, A above middle C is normally 440 Hz but is sometimes set at 432 Hz for a “warmer” orchestral tone.)

Head-Shakers
Since many persons refuse to believe the US Government’s announcement that Osama Bin Laden is dead, an underseas explorer and treasure hunter will search for the body and, if successful, he announced he will obtain DNA and other evidence.