Salvage activity last week
has focused on the demobilising of equipment after the joint venture salvage
partners, Smit and Svitzer, completed the current phase of the salvage
operation by recovering all accessible containers, a month ahead of schedule.
In respect to salvage
activities a total of 940 containers from Rena have now been processed ashore.
The owners and insurers of
Rena have issued a tender for the next stages of the operation, which will now
shift to wreck removal. While this process is underway, Braemar/Unimar has
taken an expanded role of monitoring the wreck site – see below for more
detail.
MNZ’s role, of overseeing
the salvage and container/debris recovery operations, remains the same.
The Braemar/Unimar recovery
team has taken advantage of the fine weather this week and successfully lifted
a number of containers from the seabed.
Operations Manager Neil
Lloyd says the low swell conditions allowed the Unimar marine team to forge
ahead with the operation, which has taken months of careful planning.
Five containers in a variety
of locations were hauled from the sea floor with the help of divers – and
lifted onto the Sea Tow 60 barge operated by Unimar, Braemar’s New Zealand
partner in the clean–up project.
“While the fine weather this
week meant we could push ahead, a huge amount of work has gone into this new
phase in the recovery work, including safety preparations, and weight
calculations,” says Mr Lloyd.
“A specialised dive team
using a vessel equipped with a decompression chamber was used; divers were sent
down to pre–rig containers and prepare them safe lifting.”
Neil Lloyd says the recovery
team spent some months preparing – with sonar equipment and more recently an
ROV – a remote operated underwater vehicle – to home in on a number of targets
and fix their positions for recovery. He says that more containers in water
less than 50 metres deep will be lifted off the seabed over coming weeks, when
weather conditions allow it.
Meanwhile, the
Braemar/Unimar team has stepped up its activities at the Rena site – overseeing
the wreck’s safety and security and closely monitoring its condition.
“We’ve established an
exclusion safety zone which is being patrolled 24–7, and so far there have been
no incidents or releases.
“We can assure Bay of Plenty
people that the wreck is not being left on its own unattended, as some media
have incorrectly reported. We are extremely well placed to respond to any
releases with a variety of tugs, barges and fast response craft, and
well–tested response plans.”
Braemar shoreline response
teams have continued to carry out beach surveys and debris has been recovered
from an area running from Pukehina to Matata, and Waihi Beach. Flotsam recovered
includes refrigeration foam, sawn timber, plywood sheets and plastic beads.
Similar work is continuing
on the Coromandel Peninsula where large amounts of small flotsam has been
recovered from isolated coves. Areas including Sailors Grave and Hot Water
Beach are still being impacted by plastic beads washing ashore.
Neil Lloyd says the
shoreline work is also continuing on Matakana Island, where some re–cleaning
has been necessary. The teams have made improvements to the portable vacuum
equipment in use, increasing the amount of debris that can be recovered.
Operations are also planned
for Motiti Island where container wreckage will be recovered by divers. Debris
including plastic, rope, timber and food packets is strewn among rocky
outcrops.
When it comes to oil spill
response, it has been reduced from a Tier 3, or national level, to Tier 2, or
regional level, response.
Source : SN-TR, 18.06.12
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