Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Other Shores - December 2012


The current global marine insurance market has the capacity for $1.1 to $1.2 billion of coverage but the risk presented by a single large container ship could be larger. A loaded 18,000-TEU box ship could have a total value of maybe $2.3 billion. In contrast, the hull and machinery and insured value of the Costa Concordia cruise ship, currently the biggest marine insurance loss in history, was $500 million.

India’s Supreme Court banned all mining operations and transportation of iron ore, a $4.5 billion-per-year business, in Goa. A report estimated that the exchequer had lost Rs35,000 crore (US$6.3 billion) due to illegal mining in the last 12 years.

Thin Places and Hard Knocks
In the Russian Far East, an EPIRB from the bulker Amurskaya started bleeping for help and then the ship sank with its crew. The vessel was undermanned, overloaded with 700 tons of gold ore, and had left port without proper clearances.

In the UK, the master of the reefer Springbok pleaded guilty to three charges (failure to keep a good lookout, failure to ascertain that risk of collision existed, and a failure to keep clear of a vessel being overtaken). Because visibility in the English Channel had improved, he had dismissed the lookout and proceeded at 18-20 knots. He spent the next twenty minutes chatting with a son and brother-in-law when he suddenly saw through the ship’s forward cranes the fast-approaching stern of the small LNG carrier Gas Arctic (7-8 knots), which was desperately altering course to avoid the coming collision. However, they did collide. He was fined £1,500 plus costs of £1,000. In 2003 at Singapore, a small timber carrier named Springbok was T-boned by an LPG carrier named Gas Roman. The collision welded the two ships together and salvors separated them with difficulty and some trepidation. Different ships, different owners, but much similarity in names.

The smallish Wilson Avonmouth gently grounded north of Elsinore. (If that name is vaguely familiar, get out your copy of “Hamlet.”) The vessel traffic service had noted that the coaster was heading for a problem and tried to call the ship on VHF. No answer so the VTS took actions involving a helicopter and the Swedish Coast Guard in hopes of getting the ship to anchor but no luck. The master was intoxicated. The container ship Fremantle Express ran onto rocks and its starboard anchor while entering Puerto Cortes in Honduras. No leaks or structural damage, and the ship was freed the next day by two tugs. In Alaska, the small tugboat Capt Hendren had just finished a summer of dredging for gold when it ran up on some rocks two miles outside of St. Michael, It got off a day or two later. In India, the chemical tanker Pratibha Cauvery was pushed aground at Chennai by Cyclone Nilam and the crew tried to get ashore in a lifeboat. It capsized and eighteen were rescued but four others went missing.

The container ship Deike Rickmers arrived at Cape Town with dense smoke arising from a probable fire in a container. Last summer’s fire on the container ship MSC Flaminia claimed one more life, raising the death toll to three. A Filipino crewmember died in a hospital in Portugal from severe burns sustained during the fire.

Three walkers were 3,000 feet up the munro (any mountain in Scotland with a height over 3,000 feet or 914.4 m) Beinn a’Chroin in the Trossachs when a cloud rolled in and they were lost. Poorly equipped except for a smartphone and whistle, they asked for help. A Royal Navy helicopter was diverted from a training flight but decided it didn’t want to operate in thick cloud. A crewman hiked up the munro and found the stranded walkers about 15 minutes later, uninjured, but cold. Visibility topside was about 40 meters and the whistle provided useful vectoring information for the chopper crewman. On the other side of the world, Typhoon Son Tinh separated the jack-up drill rig GSF Key Hawaii from its tugboat. As the rig approached the shore of Ha Mai Island, a Vietnamese military chopper evacuated all 35 workers on board. In the dark of night, a helicopter from the USS McCampbell spotted five Filipino fishermen standing on the roof of their sinking boat because one of them was repeatedly flashing a lighter. The destroyer took them to Manila.

An argument on the tug Nicole at Manila turned ugly and the quartermaster hacked the chief engineer to death with a bolo. At Tampa, the geared bulker Honesty Ocean was unloading bundles of 4-inch pipes with a ship’s crane when a bundle broke apart, showering pipes into the hold, on the ship’s deck, and onto the pier. Four stevedores were trapped under the pipes in the hold. One died and another was seriously injured. In Alaska near Skagway, a fisherman fell off the fishing boat Darlin’ Michelle. Shipmates tossed him a life ring and tried several times to pull him aboard but his lifejacket broke and so he died. A mechanic was killed while performing maintenance on a crane at Oakland, California. He was about 250 feet up when the trolley moved and he was crushed between a cable and the body of the crane. About 90 miles SE of Cape Hatteras and pretty much in the path of Hurricane Sandy, the made-for-a-movie replica square-rigger HMS Bounty ran into trouble and sank. Fourteen made it into liferafts but two missed a raft when the Bounty rolled. One was later located, survival-suited but comatose and unresponsive. She was Claudene Christian, a direct descendant of Fletcher Christian, the original Bounty’s chief mutineer. Still missing was Capt Robin Waldridge, a vastly experienced skipper of replica ships like the Bounty. The master of the Saudi Arabia-flagged tug Resolve Guardian died, probably of a heart attack, while the tug was en route from India to a Pakistani port. A South Korean Coast Guard small boat capsized while rescuing 15 of the Malaysian freighter Shinline’s crew and five of the just-rescued died. On the LPG carrier Maharshi Krishnatreya, five died when they accidentally inhaled gas from a leaking pipe.'

At Loch Lomond, an unconfirmed report stated that more than 100 vessels had been stolen after dark, taken out to an island and stripped that night, and then sunk. One of the custodians of the Mersey Heritage Trust’s Baltic trader tall ship Zebu attempted to mount his bike on a pontoon (float) alongside the dock wall. But he lost his balance and fell head first into the narrow gap between the pontoon and quay and became trapped under it. The Zebu’s safety officer immediately jumped in and pulled him out. He was rushed to Liverpool Royal Infirmary where he was admitted to intensive care suffering from secondary drowning. He recovered sufficiently to come out of intensive care but his condition then deteriorated and he died.

Gray Fleets
Off Florida, the submarine USS Montpelier rose to periscope depth in the path of the cruiser USS San Jacinto. Their meeting crushed the cruiser’s sonar dome.

The USS John C. Stennis Carrier Strike Group had barely arrived in the Middle East when its commander, a rear admiral, was temporarily reassigned because of an "inappropriate leadership judgment" during the deployment. The CO of the Navy’s Southwest Regional Maintenance Center was relieved of command for mismanagement and misuse of funds. And the commanding officer of the frigate USS Vandergrift took photos during a three-day “happy” visit with the ever-convivial Russians at Vladivostok and posted them on the 7th Fleet’s own Facebook page. He was promptly relieved of command for “demonstrating poor leadership and failure to ensure the proper conduct of his wardroom officers.” Three of his senior officers were relieved of duty “for personal conduct involving use of alcohol and not adhering to established liberty policies."

The commanding officer of the landing ship dock USS Harpers Ferry was hospitalized after a motorcycle accident while commuting home from work. His executive officer took over. At Mayport, Florida, a Royal Navy officer died after falling off a hoisted-out landing craft on HMS Ocean and landing on another landing craft below.

To raise £5,000 for the British Limbless Ex-Service Men's Association a Royal Navy diver ran the Great South Run while wearing 200 pounds of antique diving gear. He figured he could run a mile in an hour and a half so race organizers allowed him to run the ten miles over three days and start two days before the race itself. (For those who really must know, yes, he wore a catheter.)

White Fleets
The ex-master of the wrecked cruise ship Costa Concordia sued his ex-employer for wrongful termination of his job. In Western Australian waters, a helicopter from the frigate HMAS Toowomba was training off Fremantle when it was diverted to pick up an elderly man off the Sea Princess. He was suffering from acute stomach pains. Serious damage was discovered on the Ventura, 116,017 gross tons and built in 2007, after it hit bad weather in the Bay of Biscay. A crack at least two inches wide ran across the full width of an upper deck. (The cruise ship and its passengers made it safely to Southampton.)

Off Cape Town, an un-named catamaran capsized near Hout Bay and a crewman went missing. Passengers said he had given his lifejacket to a youngster. His body was found the next day. The boat was carrying 38 people to Duiker Island, a popular destination for seal spotting. A mock cannon exploded on a mock pirate ship carrying 26 tourists near the island of Kos in the south Aegean Sea. The explosion killed the master and injured five tourists, none seriously. A relative of the dead master got the ship back to port. In Vietnam’s scenic Ha Long Bay, five tourists died when their boat collided with another and capsized. None were wearing lifejackets and there was no safety or medical equipment on board. After a similar accident killed five tourists last year, safety standards for tour boats were implemented but their enforcement seems to have been haphazard if at all.

Those That Go Back and Forth
Gusts of wind caused the ro/ro ferry Napoleon Bonaparte to break its moorings at Marseille and it ended up aground and leaning heavily on a dock. That ripped an underwater breach in the hull about 30 meters long. The ferry was out of service for the winter. A female deckhand on the Alaska Marine Highway’s Columbia was injured at Fairhaven, Washington when a cable supporting a passenger ramp snapped and it buckled and collapsed. She fell about 20 feet onto the ramp and suffered multiple injuries. Due to bad weather conditions, the ro/pax Pride of Burgundy collided with the similar ferry Berlioz off Calais. The PoB had damage to its starboard bridge wing. On Lake Erie, the small ro/ro ferry Jimann got stuck on a sandbar only two hundred meters from its terminus at Leamington, Ontario. Thirty-three crew and passengers, including an infant, spent the night on board and the next day a tugboat pulled it free. Many on Pelee Island breathed a sigh of relief because the ferry was due to bring over six hundred hunters for the Island’s annual pheasant shoot. The Washington State ferries have minimum staffing and, if a crewman doesn’t show up for work, the ferry doesn’t sail. There were dozens of such cancellations this summer (up from four last year) and company officials are talking with unions whether union members might be unhappy (as in “work slowdown”).

In the Egyptian province of Beheira, a minibus rolled off a ferry into the Nile and fourteen workers died. In the US or perhaps Canada, another minivan knocked down a raised ramp and rolled off Horne’s ferry while it crossed the St Lawrence River between Cape Vincent in Jefferson County, New York and Wolfe Island, Ontario. The three occupants standing nearby weren’t hurt but ferry’s master/owner Horne was hospitalized for a possible heart attack. And the next day the company’s website announced, “We must close early this year due to low water levels.”

Energy
A 13.8-megawatt solar power plant has been operating at the US Navy’s China Lake research center in the Mojave Desert since January. It will save the Navy about $13 million a year because the maker of the solar units got to install its units if it sold electricity to the Navy at below the current rates.

The US Navy signed an agreement with a privately owned company for the development of advanced biofuels and bioenergy for use throughout the US military. The company will build a sustainable bio-refinery at US Naval Base Ventura County that will produce biofuels and bioenergy at prices competitive with unsubsidized conventional fuel and power. Construction of the plant will be partially funded by the California Energy Commission.

Nature
An Australian-Bahraini team of coral-reef rebuilders has been using realistic molded-concrete replicas of coral heads but may switch to more-complex heads printed by a 3-D printer.
Scientists are working on ways to “see” through the icy crust on an ocean to explore what is underneath. A major problem is the sea is on Europa, a moon of Jupiter some 390 million miles from Earth.

Metal-Bashing and Salvage
Three laborers died when steel plates fell on them from a ship’s deck at the Gadani scrapping yard on the Balochistan coast in Pakistan. In India, Asia's largest ship breaking yard, Alang, was closed as a protest against the arrest of company officials in connection with death of six laborers in a blast on a oil tanker being dismantled. Those arrested were booked for culpable homicide not amounting to murder and negligent conduct with respect to fire rather than the more-usual charge of negligence, and they could get life imprisonment.

To eliminate pollution sources Russia may hire international salvage companies to raise two old nuclear submarines. While being towed to a dismantling site, B-159 (originally K-159), a November-class submarine, sank in the Barents Sea in 2003 with nine of her crew and 1,760 lbs. (800 kg) of spent nuclear fuel. K-27 was an experimental attack submarine built in 1962 and decommissioned in 1979 due to her troublesome nuclear reactors. Nine of her crew died when fuel elements failed. Her reactor compartment was sealed and the submarine was scuttled in the eastern Kara Sea in 1982.

The sunken ro/ro ferry Bahuga Jaya may remain at the bottom of Sunda Strait at a depth of 76 meters and with strong underwater currents along with what is now believed to be the bodies of 43 passengers. Rescue authorities said it would be “inefficient” to raise it to the surface. (A salvor might have a different opinion.)

“Bottom suction” is often a limiting factor when refloating a grounded vessel. At Valencia, the grounded bulker Celia broke bottom suction by using its cranes to swing two heavy containers from one side to the other while the tug Punta Mayor pulled. Everything worked and all that remained were a damage assessment and an investigation into why the ship had gone aground almost a month earlier.

Human Imports
As many as 130 people may have drowned off the coast of southern Bangladesh after a boat carrying passengers trying to illegally get into Malaysia sank in the Bay of Bengal. Only six survivors were found. At least 61 people died when a boat believed to be carrying illegal Syrians and Palestinians migrants sank off the coast of Turkey. A boat carrying as many as 100 Tunisian migrants ran into trouble in the Mediterranean and at least 56 people were rescued, some from the sea and others from the small and uninhabited Sicilian island of Lampione

Nasties and Territorial Imperatives
West Africa was the month’s piracy hot spot. Seven non-Nigerian mariners were kidnapped from the anchor-handler Bourbon Liberty 249 off Nigeria while another nine crewmen, reportedly all Nigerians, were left on board. The vessel was soon located at Bonny Island and the captives were released two weeks later, probably after ransoms were paid. The comment was made that “this attack was a ‘departure against the usual pattern of piracy’ in the Gulf of Guinea.”

The Aframax tanker Orfeas quietly left the anchorage at Abidjan, probably hijacked and heading for Lagos, Nigeria. About three days later, the tanker was released minus a goodly part of its cargo of 32,068 tons of gasoline.

Odd Bits and Headshakers
The US Coast Guard conducted an extensive search off Mobile, Alabama for a Filipino sailor from the containership MSC Tokyo. He had been told to recover the Jacob’s ladder after the pilot arrived. The ladder was down and a shoe was on the deck so it was believed he fell overboard. Four days later, he was found in a downtown Mobile hotel.

The Statute of Liberty will soon have a rival. In 2014, a giant Ferris wheel will open near the Staten Island ferry terminal. The wheel will be 625 feet high while London’s famed London Eye wheel is only 443 feet tall. (I once asked a carnie operator why they bothered erecting a Ferris wheel when few rode on it. He said attendance was always way down unless the Ferris wheel showed above the trees.)
Actor Sir Alec Guinness said, “I gave my best performances during the war trying to be an officer and a gentleman.” (He was commanding officer of a landing craft or two during World War II with several combat landings to his credit.)

In the UK, the Strood is an ancient causeway (originally built by the Saxons in about 680 AD) that connects the Essex mainland with Mersea Island, about a half-mile offshore. The causeway (now paved) is low-lying and is regularly inundated by high tide. Most locals carry a tide table to avoid being embarrassed or inconvenienced but one elderly woman forgot that detail and was stranded. She got out of her car and was swept away. A nearby recovery truck was called and rescued her but within half an hour there were seven more vehicles trapped on the flooded road. Nine forgetful adults and a toddler were rescued.

At San Rafael in California, a backhoe excavator on a barge was cleaning silt from a canal when the crew spotted a nearby apartment on fire. Moving in, the operator tried to dump dredge buckets of water on the fire but was too far away. He then dredged his way closer. The fire was effectively knocked down when local firefighters arrived.

A Senatorial candidate in Connecticut ran a television ad promoting his efforts to create jobs at the state's sub-maker, General Dynamics' Electric Boat of Groton. Inadvertently, it featured a Norwegian submarine.

Was the homophone accidental or not? A marine technology magazine creatively used the English language when it printed that one company had “developed a way to take fish awful and make a world-class fertilizer.”

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Other Shores - November 2012


Neil Armstrong’s cremated remains were dropped at an unknown location into the Atlantic Ocean during a Navy burial-at-sea military service aboard the guided-missile cruiser USS Philippine Sea.
The ship’s master was not included when the crew of the wrecked cruise ship Costa Concordia was awarded Lloyd's List "Seafarer of the Year" award for 2012 for displaying "true examples of courage and professionalism" during the dangerous night evacuation of the ship.

Opening of the widened Panama Canal in 2015 will lead to “fierce” competition among US ports for inbound containers but should present opportunities for increasing exports. But probable after-effects from a possible longshoremen’s strike at East and Gulf coast container ports next year are already causing shippers to review their plans on how to best use the Canal.

US crude-oil and product imports hit the lowest levels in a decade but tanker exports of products were booming.

About two-thirds of the US has been enduring drought conditions and the cost might be $77 billion, making the drought the third-costliest natural disaster in US history after Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and another devastating drought in 1988.

About every three days, a cargo vessel, tanker, or passenger ship is involved in an accident somewhere in the Baltic Sea. Last year, 121 ships ran aground, collided, caught fire, or were involved in some other type of mishap.

An international tug company cited lower volumes of shipping and increased costs as reasons for upping towage fees at one Australian port by a whopping 54 percent. (The tug company has no competitors at that port.)

Thin Places and Hard Knocks
Off Valencia, the smallish container ships Celia and BSLE Sunrise dragged their anchors and went aground in a violent rainstorm with heavy swell and wind gusts to 77 km/h (about 48 mph). Welding sparked a fire that killed five crewmen and a fireman on a tanker possibly named the Shun Cheng while it was anchored in the Gulf of Tonkin off Vietnam. At New Orleans, authorities notified anchored ships that their rudders may have set into the soft mud near the riverbanks while swinging at anchorage but no damage to steering apparatus was anticipated. Blamed was low-water conditions on the Mississippi. At Finnsnesrenna in Norway, the small Straumvik carrying 380 tons of salmon and a crew of four ran aground after passing the fairway light on the wrong side. It suffered a gash in a ballast tank. The news account did not specify whether the salmon were alive or dead.

It is embarrassing when your car hits a police vehicle so imagine the feelings on the Canadian laker John D. Leitch when it struck a pier and a Lorain County Sheriff’s Office boat while traveling the Black River near Lorain. Ohio. Breathalyzer tests of the captain and crewmembers were negative.
Fire broke out in a container carrying hazardous and toxic substances so the Amsterdam Bridge was moved to the outer anchorage at Mumbai Port for some serious firefighting. Most of the ship-based conflagration was extinguished within three days but containers smoldered on for at least another month. A major fire ravaged the New Zealand-based fishing vessel Amaltal Columbia at sea but the vessel was safely towed into Lyttelton.

About forty miles off South Devon, the master of the German-owned coaster Krempertor went down into a hold to investigate an alarm that was sounding. He died of injuries suffered in a fall there. Police treated the accident as “avoidable.” About 900 km east of Japan, the 119-ton tuna-fishing vessel Horiei was run down by the 25,000-ton bulker Nikkei Tiger. The larger vessel could find only nine of 22 fishermen. The smallish sand-carrying Fairland ran aground in the Demerara (think rum because that’s where it comes from) River in eastern Guyana. During efforts to free the ship, it was necessary to move a crane and a hydraulic line burst, causing the crane’s boom to fall and hit a plank that struck the chief mate on his leg. He fell, fatally hitting his head.

At the Port of Indiana, the laker Algoma Transport was unloading 26,000 tons of iron ore concentrate onto a pier when the pier started cracking and collapsing. Loading stopped. In the south China port of Gaolan, while being unloaded from the semi-submersible heavy-lift ship Zhen Hua 12, a 1,700-ton unloader fell into the water and hit the ship, punching two holes in its hull. Mis-ballasting of the ship as the unloader was being moved ashore was the probable cause. The unloader may have been one of seven coal unloaders recently bought by the port.

In the South China Sea, the tug Swiber Charlton spotted and picked up a floating Thai fisherman. Little else is known except his name was Montri Srirak and he summed up his gratitude by saying, “I am thankful that Swiber Charlton saved my life. Everyone treated me well." In Alaska, a forward-deployed Coast Guard helicopter took a male with heart-attack symptoms off the Harvey Spirit, a 245-foot offshore supply boat some 134 miles west of Barrow. Off Cornwall, a lone yachtsman fell off the Regulus but he had a personal electronic locator beacon on him and was picked up by a Royal Navy helicopter an hour later. In South Carolina in Charleston harbor, a Coast Guard small boat took a crewman off the geared bulker Clipper Tenacious after he started suffering abdominal pains as the ship neared port. On the other side of the world in the Java Sea, the bulker Clipper Mayflower picked up two injured survivors of a sunken immigrant boat and later received praise for its role as on-site communications coordinator. The remaining 78 survivors were picked up by Australian defense vessels and taken to Christmas Island for sorting out.(One might assume the two Clippers are fleetmates but the Mayflower is Danish-owned and the Tenacious is owned out of Nassau. Both are Bahamas-flagged, however.)

Gray Fleets
Airships were in the news last month. The US Navy is back into operating blimps – well, at least one blimp. The East Coast-based non-rigid airship MZ-3A is a manned platform for testing sensors that could be used on a future US Army airship. (The US Army ordered "up to three" of Northrop Grumman's Long Endurance Multi-intelligence Vehicles (LEMV) in a $517m deal in 2010. They should see service in Afghanistan this year.)

The Thai Army seems to have purchased an airship back in 2009. It is not yet operational but could be by November. Critics claimed its sensors cannot see into Thailand’s deep jungles because the system was designed for desert regions such as Afghanistan. It is known that fixes were needed to US-supplied cameras and a video streaming system.

Finally, the Royal Navy was briefed on possible British-built airships for surveillance and supply carrying. At only £50 million each and filled with an explosion-proof 60 percent helium / 40 percent air mix, an airship could carry 150 commandos and their boats or 50 tons of supplies. Best of all, it could even be remotely operated as a drone.

There are no color bars in the US Navy, at least in the upper ranks. Rear Adm. Brian Brown relieved Rear Adm. Jonathan White as head of the Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command.

The CO of the nuclear submarine USS Pittsburgh was relieved of command of the sub a week after taking command. He had dumped his mistress by sending her an email from a fictitious fellow-worker saying he had unexpectedly died. She learned the truth when she visited his former residence to offer condolences and was told he had moved to Connecticut to take command of a submarine. Charges included dereliction of duty, adultery, and unbecoming conduct.

The US Navy awarded a $94 million contract for advance planning and preliminary execution of fire-restoration efforts on USS Miami. The sub was damaged in a fire in May while it was drydocked at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine, and estimates of repair costs are currently at the $650 million level.

The US Military Sealift Command uses civilians to operate many non-combat Navy and governmental vessels. Most MSC ships can be identified by the USNS prefix to their names but four retain the USS prefix and remain in commission because they have a US Navy Captain in charge. They are the submarine tenders USS Frank Cable and USS Emory S. Land, the command ship USS Mount Whitney, and the newly created Afloat Forward Staging Base (Interim) USS Ponce.

The Royal Navy’s Sea King helicopters will be taken out of service in 2016, leaving as much as a four-year gap in airborne early warning capability until 2020 when replacement airborne surveillance and control helicopters should become operational.

The Iranian Kilo-class attack submarine Tareq needed repairs but the original Russian builders declined the work (no comment) so Iranian personnel repaired the radars, pneumatic and compressor systems, pumps, engines, telecommunications, and other systems.

Delivery to the Indian Navy of the aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya (formerly the Russian Navy’s Admiral Gorshkov) has been deferred yet again to October 2013. On sea trials, seven out of eight boilers providing propulsion steam were defective. Why, one may ask? Read on! According to a Russian spokesman, India had refused to use asbestos as a means to protect the boilers from heat, fearing that the material was dangerous for the crew and the boilers’ designer had to use firebrick, which proved not sufficiently heatproof. (Firebrick is used to line boilers and asbestos is used externally to keep heat in pipes and people from being burned by hot surfaces.)

In spite of Congressional disapproval, the US Navy is dead-set on achieving non-dependence on fossil fuels. US Navy scientists are hot on the trail on making fuel from seawater. Extract carbon dioxide and hydrogen gas from seawater and then use catalysts to convert them into J5 jet fuel. (J5 has been proposed as the energy source for all Navy operations, including fighter jets as well as shipboard boilers, diesels, and marine gas turbines.) One drawback to the process is that producing the hydrogen “requires nearly 60 percent of the amount of energy that would be stored in the liquid hydrocarbon fuel” but nuclear-powered ships could produce a lot of electricity and seawater is cheap.

And is the unused runway on Ford Island at Pearl Harbor a significant historical site that should be preserved as a memorial to Dec 7, 1941 or can it be used as the site of a 60,000-panel solar-panel farm? The runway and the rest of Ford Island were designated a National Historic Landmark in 1964 but the Navy says, “it is an inactive space that is ideally located and sized“ and it is “critically important to achieving renewable energy mandates.”

White Fleets
Several cruise lines eliminated planned calls at North African ports because of Muslim protests about an anti-Islamic film posted on the Internet.

In Maine, a cruise-ship tender carrying 93 passengers from the cruise ship Celebrity Summit ran abruptly aground at night on a remote shoal off Bar. Harbor. The whale-watch boat Bay King III and the pilot boat Frenchman Bay took off the passengers and two crewmembers. In Vietnam, five Taiwanese tourists heading back to their ship died when their tender named Paradise collided with the tourist boat Dong Phong 02. Thirteen other tourists survived their expulsion from paradise. In Bermuda, passengers watched mooring lines snap as 45-knot winds (52 miles per hour) pushed the Norwegian Star into the Explorer of the Seas at the next berth. Two tugs eventually pushed the Norwegian Star back into position. Both vessels suffered some hull damage. (Two of Bermuda’s three government tugs were recently out of service.) Off Portugal, the Queen Victoria suffered problems in one propulsion unit so the cruise ship headed for Bremerhaven for repairs that would enable it to achieve the speeds required on its next cruise.

A Portuguese cruise company went into bankruptcy when three of its five ships were arrested, and those arrests stranded at least 550 Ukrainian, Indonesian, and Portuguese seafarers without their pay. The 1948-built Athena was originally the Swedish Stockholm that infamously collided with the Italian liner Andrea Doria in 1956. The Princess Danae was converted from the cargo liner Port Melbourne, and in September this year the Yugoslavian-built Arion, although highly rated by some passengers, was named the “worst-performing small cruise ship” among 300 cruise ships.

Those That Go Back and Forth
At Hong Kong off Lamma Island, the ferry-turned-into-excursion boat-for-a-night Lamma IV and the ferry Sea Smooth collided although the night was clear. The damaged ferry continued on, its master fearing it might sink. The other, smaller vessel was holed in its engineroom and quickly sank stern-first with only its bow thrusting upwards above water. It had been chartered to take company employees and their families to watch fireworks celebrating China’s National Day and thirty-seven of them died while 100-plus were taken to local hospitals. (A nine-year-old later died of her injuries.) Crewmembers from both vessels were arrested, and even the highest levels of disciplined Hong Kong were upset and stunned by the rare accident.
On the Mahakam River in Indonesia’s portion of Borneo island the wooden ferryboat Surya Indah carrying 97 crew and passengers upstream hit a log and sank. Twenty-two people died and at least fourteen others were missing. 
“The ship was made in 2001 and is really seaworthy. According to the boat manifest, the passengers only numbered 40 and there were 10 tons of goods,” explained port official. But other reports said 112 people might have been on board. Off Sumatra, the ro/pax Bahuga Jaya sank after colliding with the LPG-carrying Norgas Cathinka. The tanker left the scene because its master though leaking gas might cause a catastrophic explosion and fire. Eight died, 207 were rescued, and the master and chief officer of the Norgas Cathinka were accused of negligence. The accident led to increased calls for a bridge connecting Java and Sumatra. In New Zealand, a ferry serving Waiheke Island inadvertently surged forward (a crew-at-the-throttle goof) and the gangway broke, leaving a man dangling off the bow and in the water, Luckily, his four-year-old son wasn’t involved. The new freight ferry Huelin Dispatch touched bottom hard enough to cause leaks. It was on its maiden voyage from Southampton to the Channel Islands.

Legal Matters
Arresting a nation’s largest sail-training vessel in a foreign country will get attention. That happened to the Argentine Navy’s square-rigged Libertad in Ghana. The court order was sought by creditors suing Argentina in international courts after Argentina declared a world-record sovereign debt default during an economic meltdown a decade ago. Bondholders want to recover the full value of the defaulted bonds and have sought to freeze state assets. The Libertad qualified as such.

Nature
Although fishing was stopped three years ago, sonar surveys by an experienced fisherman revealed that the fish populations of tilapia and sardines in the Sea of Galilee (aka Lake Kinneret) have risen to “very optimistic” levels.

Shell had hoped to do some serious drilling in the Alaskan Arctic but decided to limit efforts to drilling shallow “top holes” that won’t reach oil-bearing depths and wait for next year.

Could rising sea temperatures be melting methane hydrates, which remain frozen in a seabed under very low temperatures and very high pressures? Scientists investigated methane vents near Spitzbergen and decided that at least some of the gas outlets had been active for a long time since carbonate deposits, which form when microorganisms convert the escaping methane, were found on the vents.

Metal Bashing
What keeps some ships afloat? You might be surprised. After 51 years of distinguished service, USS Enterprise (CVN 65) will be decommissioned later this year. One of its nuclear-powerplant engineers walked under the ship while it was drydocked during a mid-life extension program many years ago. Intrigued by something sticking down, he discovered that someone had sealed a hull opening with a wooden plug. It may still be there.

The former 31-year-old former Royal Navy flagship HMS Ark Royal was sold to a Turkish scrap metal firm for £3 million. Alternative bids would have turned the warship into a diving reef, a helipad in the Thames, a museum, or a casino were “judged either not feasible or appropriate, or carried too much risk.” The Ark Royal was withdrawn from service last year five years early as part of sweeping military cutbacks.

Imports
A boat carrying illegal emigrants sank halfway to its destination of Lampedusa Island and Italian authorities arrested two survivors, probably the master and his assistant. That particular tragedy triggered creation of an investigative committee. On it are Italy’s Minster of the Interior and Tunisia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs. (Lampedusa has become illegal immigrants’ entry to Europe and thousands of illegals are camping out on the island.)

Nasties and Territorial Imperatives
The Thai Navy (using five vessels and two helicopters) plus five other governmental agencies arrested 108 Vietnamese fishermen on ten trawlers that had been catching giant cuttlefish in Thai waters.

Odd Bits and Head-Shakers
Six British and Australian adventurers will attempt to authentically re-enact Sir Ernest Shackleton's incredible boat voyage from Elephant Island to South Georgia, followed by the difficult crossing of its mountainous interior. Their 22-and-a-half-foot (6.86-metre-long) boat is a precise replica of the James Caird. Her crew will also endure the hardships of that age, wearing clothing of the time. (How “authentic” can the replica voyage really be? If memory serves, the Caird’s cockpit held only three and that meant Shackleton’s off-duty men spent many hours below shivering in slimy, mouldering reindeer-skin sleeping bags awash in the bilge water, and with loose reindeer hairs everywhere including in their food and mouths. And when it came time to climb, they improvised mountain-climbing boots by carefully inserting small brass screws into the soles of their leather boots.) BTW, this replica boat is not to be confused with the state-of-the-art survey motor boat James Caird IV carried aboard HMS Protector, Britain’s Antarctic protection vessel.

A small-boater was killed in Mississippi when his 23-foot center-console fishing boat struck "an unidentified object" east of Deer Island in the Mississippi Sound. That broke his outboard motor free and it flipped up and into the boat, where the propeller hit him in the back. He died while rescuers were trying to get him to a hospital. Most probably, he hit a dredge pipe floating just below the surface that carried slurried spoils to a remote deposit site.

At one political party’s national convention, a patriotic tribute by a retired admiral to fellow veterans inadvertently featured four Soviet Navy vessels.

One sometimes wonders at the ads created by advertising agencies and reviewed and paid for by their clients. Take, for example, the current ad by an engine maker. The headline reads “Go with the generator that works as hard as you do.” The illustration shows four fishermen, seated and standing but all idly staring back at the FV’s turbulent wake.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Other Shores - October 2012


Per his wishes, Neil Armstrong, the first man to set foot on the moon, will be buried at sea. The US Navy confirmed it would perform the ceremony, but would not say where, when, or from which ship or whether the burial will be a full-body burial or a dropping of ashes.

Commercial fishing is the deadliest job in the United States, topped by the fishermen in the Northeast's multi-species groundfish (cod, haddock, etc.) and Atlantic-scallop fisheries. They are 37 times more likely to die on the job than a police officer.

Because there are too many of the largest tankers (the VLCC) and competition has become cut-throat, owners lose an estimated $5,700 each day during the return voyage a tanker makes after each hopefully profitable Mid East-to-Japan voyage. (That figure ignores any benefits from slow steaming.)

Double hulls decrease the chances that oil and other contaminants can get into the sea. Required after enactment of Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (when many foreign experts scoffed at the US insistence on double hulling), they cost more to build and take up valuable cargo space. Experience soon showed that it was difficult, and therefore expensive, to control and repair corrosion damage in the intra-hull void spaces and it also became clear that the service life of double-hulled ships might be shorter than of equivalent single-hull ships. Recently, government attention has focused on the energy and air-pollution aspects, and OPA 90 may end up being rewritten.

Thin Places and Hard Knocks
Off Cuba about 500 meters offshore between Mariel and Vista al Mar, the container ship Hansa Berlin ran aground. The crewmembers were evacuated by helicopter and were lodged in a hotel in Havana. In New Orleans, two tugs waiting for possible work quietly sank one night. A lone watchman escaped safely. The owner is a marine-salvage firm and will probably use one of its derrick barges to refloat the two tugs. In Chile, the bulker Ocean Breeze went ashore after its anchor chain broke. Parallel to the beach, the stranded ship provided spectators with spectacular sights as surf-created spray spouted many times higher than the mast tops.

At Singapore, the bulk carrier Sunny Horizon collided with the LPG gas carrier DL Salvia in the Temasek Fairway, about 700 meters east of Sultan Shoal. The bunker tank on DL Salvia was breached but less than 60 metric tons of bunker escaped.

When the bulker Lucy Oldendorff arrived at Tauranga, New Zealand, the crew reported there had been a fire in a hold carrying palm kernels four days earlier but they had extinguished it with CO2. But smoke started coming from the same hold and so conditions there were monitored by infrared cameras and smoke detectors while the ship’s crew removed the palm kernels by crane. In the end, shorebased firefighters were needed. In a Croatian repair yard, sparks from welding started a fire on the crude-oil tanker Nordic Passat and three welders had to be rescued by firefighters. At Lyttelton (the port for Christchurch) in New Zealand, firefighters cut a hole in the side of the drydocked trawler Ocean Breeze to get at a fire inside. It burned for twelve hours and leaking ammonia remained a peril afterwards.

Alaskan Coast Guard medevacs are usually featured here but other Coasties were busy A chopper medevaced a young woman off the Carnival Elation some 250 miles south of Mobile, Alabama. Her kidneys had failed after missing a routine dialysis treatment. And another Alaskan chopper lifted the chief mate off the tanker Dreggen after he suffered a groin injury when his pants got “caught in a spindle.” (No further explanation was available.) But the Alaskan Coast Guard choppers were busy too. In one day they did two medevacs of mariners with heart attack symptoms on container ships. One was on the BBC Denmark originally about 585 miles southwest of Dutch Harbor and the next was on the APL China originally about 420 miles southwest of Kodiak. (In both cases, the ships steamed closer so as to reduce the range.) Then an Alaskan chopper took an elderly female off the Diamond Princess. She was showing signs of a possible blocked femoral artery. Elsewhere, some seventy miles off Cornwall in sea state 8, forty-foot (12m) swells, and atrocious visibility, a Royal Navy helicopter finally managed to find a 20-foot sailboat after searching for over an hour when the lone sailor lit off a flare. He had injured an ankle while trying to repair mast and rigging. In his haste to get off, he jumped overboard, and that did not make this rescue any easier. Closer to shore, the cross-Channel ferry Armorique and the container ship Maersk Patras stood by as a Royal Navy helicopter lifted the crew of the sunken Brixham-based fishing vessel Chloe T from a liferaft. In Switzerland, a survey boat with four aboard was mapping the Rhine River near Basel’s port when it ran into a Belgian container barge. A Swiss helicopter plucked three surveyors out of the River but one died of his injuries. In the Seychelles, the three-man crew of the ferry Le Cerf were rescued by a searching yacht four hours after the ferry sank. They had used their cell phones to direct rescuers but it was the glare of a searchlight that helped make the final connection.

Typhoon Bolaven broke the empty bulker Pacific Carrier in half while it was anchored in South Korea. The vessel was in lay-up after a collision with the container ship Hyundai Confidence last year.

In Baltimore, the tanker Wawasan Ruby was heading for a berth in Curtis Bay when it hit a coal-loading structure. The resulting “substantial damage” was estimated at $5 million in repairs and lost business. In New York harbor, a couple fishing from their modest dinghy had to jump into Jamaica Bay when they were run down by a 600-hp NYPD patrol boat. They claimed both coppers were using their cellphones but one officer explained he ran into their boat while turning his head “to look at the rear of the vessel to ensure his wake was reduced.”  The couple are suing. It took the artist a year to create a giant horseshoe crab sculpture and arrange for its sinking as part of an artificial reef off New Jersey but a strap broke as it was being lowered to the bottom and it flipped upside. Then two small supporting barges landed on top of it. But it still attracts fish, and that was the idea. Liberia’s president was denied an afternoon cruise when the gangway of the coastal transport Diallo & Macedo jammed. His day was doubly worse because he had to wait for an hour after his arrival before two tugboats brought the vessel to the pier.

Gray Fleets
In the Arabian Sea, thirteen starving crewmen radioed a passing US Naval patrol plane for help because pirates had stripped the Iranian dhow Pavam of its supplies. The destroyer USS Hue City provided medical help for two of the crew plus 50 gallons of fuel, 70 gallons of water, and food. (If you are curious about Arabian diets, the “food” consisted of four bags of rice and six cans of kidney beans.)
The guided-missile destroyer USS Winston S. Churchill responded to a distress radio call from the bulker Belde, and rendered medical assistance approximately 110 miles north of Socotra Island, Oman. The injury was caused in a cargo-handling accident. An embarked helicopter took the injured man to an Oman medical facility for treatment.

The commanding officer of the ballistic-missile submarine USS Rhode Island became aware of onboard cheating problems during training examinations for nuclear-submarine operations and he temporarily relieved of duty one of his engineers. After investigations, he was reinstated without disciplinary action.

The US Navy’s new Littoral Combat Ship has a “core” crew of forty to operate its highly automated systems but a Navy study revealed that the crew was over-taxed in port and exhausted underway. More berths have been added but it is not clear whether the crew size will be increased

The world’s oldest commissioned warship, the frigate USS Constitution, set sail once again, this time using three sails and travelling 1,100 yards in seventeen minutes. The event commemorated the 200th anniversary of her victory over the British frigate HMS Guerriere during the War of 1812, the first time a United States ship defeated a Royal Navy frigate of nearly equal size. It was also the battle in which the ship earned her nickname of “Old Ironsides.” The last preceding sail was in 1997 during its 200th birthday and six sails were set then. During a 1927-1934 nation-wide tour by Ironsides, a full set of sails was installed but they were set just once and, by chance or plan, that day was dead calm.

The Royal Navy discovered that it had overpaid more than 400 tars and wants the money back. Current service people will have their pay docked up to four days a month until each debt (up to £17,000) is paid.

The Dutch Navy will search for the wreck of the Dundee-based World War Two submarine O-13 (Onderzeeboot 13) that disappeared more than 70 years ago. It escaped from Holland during the German invasion in May 1940 to join the Royal Navy but failed to return from a mission in the North Sea a month later.

An inquest revealed the intimate details of a suicide on the minesweeper HMS Cattistock. A British seaman shot himself in the head on the minesweeper HMS Hurworth in February of 2010 and that devastated a close friend. He sought counseling and was taking sleeping pills and anti-depressants but when he was cruelly taunted by senior shipmates (“not shot yourself yet?” for example), he also shot himself.

White Fleets
The cruise ship Volendam was among ships that responded when the far-smaller (79-foot overall) sightseeing vessel Baranoff Winds ran aground in Alaska’s Glacier Bay. The Volendam took off seventy of the 76 persons aboard. Back in the US mainland, the coastal cruise ship Yorktown ran aground in the Detroit River, giving its 120 passengers something extra for their money. A tugboat soon pulled it free. On Ontario’s Lake Simcoe, the excursion vessel Serendipity Princess caught the corner of a dock and stopped dead. People went flying and two were taken to a hospital. The boat has a capacity of 265 passengers and tours Kempenfelt Bay off Lake Simcoe every day. In Venice, wind gusts up to 70 miles per hour pulled the Carnival Breeze away from the pier during embarkation but nobody was on the gangways at the time. Tugs re-docked the ship about an hour later.

The Jewel of the Seas hit an overhead power cable while sailing into the port of Klaksvik in the Faroe Islands of Denmark. A seaman was injured by falling debris and the mast and equipment on it suffered too. A company spokeswoman later explained,” All the navigational tools and charts we use to plan our voyage, including information we obtained from the local port authorities and harbor master in advance of our arrival, indicated we had enough clearance to pass under the cable."  

Touring the US Inland rivers will be the new paddlewheel steamer Queen of the Mississippi as soon as it is christened.

Those That Go Back and Forth
In Boston’s outer harbor, Nix’s Mate has a beacon marking a cross-channel connecting the two main shipping channels. It is a mini-island made from granite blocks and is topped with a prominent pyramidal beacon. It’s big for a beacon but a master-in-training managed to run the fast catamaran ferry Provincetown II aground on it with a screech. (Thick fog and perhaps radar’s minimum-range limitation were mostly to blame.) None of the 149 on board was harmed and the company quickly explained, “The fault is ours completely, and we bear the responsibility fully.” (Nix’s Mate was originally eleven or twelve acres in extent but got smaller as ballast and, later, slate were mined. In the 1700’s it was a place where pirates were executed and their bodies then gibbeted. One was pirate chief William Fly who scolded the hangman for incorrectly securing his noose, then re-tied it himself.)

In Pakistan, outlaws who use Tarbela Lake to smuggle timber have expanded their activities. Three outlaw passengers on a ferry on the River Indus suddenly drew guns and relieved nearly thirty passengers of their cash, mobile phones, wristwatches, and other valuables. Then they forced the ferry to sail close to the riverbank and hopped ashore.

In China, a ferry carrying nineteen struck an obstacle in the turbulent Xiyang River in the Guangnan county of Yunnan province and capsized. Six went missing. And elsewhere in that massive nation, a ferry carrying 21 people and 10 vehicles sank. Four days later, three bodies, a truck, a taxi, and a Honda SUV had been retrieved. In southern China in Xishuangbanna on the rain-swollen Mekong River, a ferry capsized when caught in the strong current and swept off course. The ferry was overloaded with motorcycles and other cargo plus 23 people, mostly Burmese schoolchildren. The fourteen missing included nine schoolkids. Finally, the Yangtze claimed thirteen lives and some trucks when a not-overloaded ferry carrying 21 people sank in Anhui province.

In the Philippines, the Super Shuttle Ferry 15 lost power one night and drifted ashore off the town of Merida in Leyte. Most passengers were transferred to the Super Shuttle Ferry 23 but six remained on board since they drove embarked trucks.  Super Shuttle 23 returned to the scene to attempt to free its fleetmate.

Nature 
Drought in the US Midwest meant less water for the rivers and less grain to be barged, Unless it really rains upstream, the Mississippi River is expected to stay low through October but will not reach record lows. But water levels got low enough that a river bottom wedge of saltwater started creeping upstream, threatening the water supply for New Orleans. The US Army Corps of engineers quickly constructed a temporary underwater barrier sill at Mile 64 Above the Head of the Passes.) The sill was sized so that a draft of 45 feet is maintained for shipping. Similar sills were built in 1988 and 1999.

In New Zealand, ironsands from its beaches are wet into a slurry and pumped to an offshore tanker and they are important in making superior types of steel in Japan and China. But Kiwis could be $1.3 billion richer if the Chatham Rock Phosphate resource was developed, said an economic research agency. All that would be needed would be to mine the 25 million-ton rock phosphate deposit—but it is 400 meters deep on the Chatham Rise, only 450 km from New Zealand and 150 km from the Chatham Islands.

And there are even more ways Kiwis could get rich. There are commercial mineral deposits on the Campbell Plateau, and potentially valuable sites lie along several arcs of active and extinct seabed volcanic activity. Their active underwater volcanoes, or “black smokers,” present a tantalizing long-term prospect because their polymetallic sulphide “smoke” contains iron, manganese, gold, silver, copper, and zinc, and the smokers’ deposits are self-replenishing.

Metal-Bashing
Removal of the cruise ship Costa Concordia from its rocky berth near Giglio, Italy will take longer than previously announced.  Look for it to be afloat again some time next Spring.

Imports
A refugee boat with 150 on board capsized and sank west of Java. Searchers found only 55 survivors. To give an idea of the resources used, here were the searching vessels (figures in parentheses are the number of survivors picked up): HMAS Maitland (34), APL Bahrain (15), AS Carelia (4), Gwendolyn (1), Da Qing Xia (1), Chemroute, Forever South West, Voyage Explorer, Frontier Coronet, Pelafigue Tide, World Swan. Vessel types included a patrol boat, several container ships, a tanker, bulkers, and an anchor-handler.

Nasties and Territorial Imperatives
Off Somalia, piracy was virtually nil, with no attacks against commercial vessels and only one attack on a local dhow. (It was thwarted by naval forces.) But one hostage was executed on the bulker Orna, which was hijacked off Seychelles in 2010 and is being used as a pirate mothership. "The killing was a message to the owners of the ship who paid no heed to our ransom demands," explained a pirate commander.

The Gulf of Guinea off Africa’s west coast was the piracy hot spot. Hijacking product tankers off Nigeria must be profitable because three hijackings took place. First was the Energy Centurion, and about 3,000 tons of gas oil (worth about US$3 million) and ship’s equipment and crew valuables were stolen before the ship was released. Next was an unidentified Greek-operated oil tanker seized off Togo. Last was the Abu Dhabi Star, whose crew took to a citadel while radioing for help. The pirates fled when the Nigerian Navy (or Togolese Navy; accounts vary) intervened. All three hijackings may be the work of one sophisticated crime cartel, and hijacked cargoes are often unloaded to another tanker and sold on the region’s illegal fuel market.

Odd Bits and Head-Shakers
To dock the ever-larger container ships coming into service, some harbor tugs being built in the US will have massive bollard pulls of more than 90 tons. (In 1979, Falmouth Towage Company, a firm in the southwest of England, had five respectably competent tugs with a combined bollard pull of just 70 tons. But ships were far smaller then.)

A new anti-fouling treatment being tested on the Dutch salvage tug Willem-B Sr is a self-adhesive textured film, not a chemical that has to be re-applied periodically. The short fibers of the film provide a physical barrier to mussels, barnacles, and algae.

During equipment testing, the commercial research ship Falkor spotted the wreck of ship Terra Nova, a whaler, sealer, and polar exploration ship that sank off the southern coast of Greenland in September, 1943, after being damaged by ice while carrying military supplies. A century ago, the historic exploration vessel carried Captain Robert Scott to the Antarctic for his doomed and fruitless expedition to the South Pole.

Retrieving HMS Hood’s bell was postponed due to bad weather and strong currents after ten days of attempts from billionaire Paul Allen’s mega-yacht Octopus. HMS Hood was sunk in the Denmark Strait, between Iceland and Greenland by plunging fire from the German battleship Bismarck on 24 May 1941. (However, many believe it was an 8-inch shell from the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen that actually caused the Hood to blow up.)

The Brit was UK-bound from the Azores but he and his sailboat Elixir had been beaten-up by ten days of bad weather. His Mayday call was answered by the Russian destroyer Vice-Admiral Kulakov. Its crew repaired his electronics and got the engine started (they couldn’t do much for a torn mainsail) while the yachtsman gulped down hot food and drugs and then motored onwards. The Russians also notified the British coastguard of the situation and the indomitable lone sailor was later taken off by a coastguard cutter. He was 83 years old.