(CNN) -- On any
day, between 5 million and 6 million containers are on the high seas, carrying
everything from potato chips to refrigerators. But not all of them make it to
their destination, as the crew of the Svendborg Maersk have just found out.
Their Danish-flagged ship was in the Bay of
Biscay last week as hurricane-force winds battered the Atlantic coast of
Europe. Amid waves of 30 feet and winds of 60 knots, the Svendborg began losing
containers off northern France. After the ship arrived in the Spanish port of
Malaga this week, Maersk discovered that about 520 containers were unaccounted
for. Stacks of others had collapsed.
It's the biggest recorded loss of containers
overboard in a single incident.
As repairs are made to the Svendborg in
Malaga, Palle Laursen, Maersk's vice president of operations, says the company
is examining its procedures "to avoid similar incidents in the
future." The company told CNN that the extreme weather had an unexpectedly
forceful impact on the ship's movements. It said 85% of the lost containers
were empty and others included such dry goods as frozen meat. None contained
dangerous goods. Maersk is now contacting customers to tell them that their
shipments are at the bottom of the ocean.
The Svendborg, which was on its way from
Rotterdam in the Netherlands to Colombo in Sri Lanka via the Suez Canal, warned
French maritime authorities that vessels should look out for floating
containers, but most sank quickly in the mountainous seas. Thirteen have now been
recovered, according to French officials.
The French environmental group Robin des Bois said Friday it would
sue Maersk for failing to disclose the full extent of the loss when it
occurred, putting the lives of others in danger, causing pollution and
abandoning waste at sea. The group claimed the containers were a lasting danger
to fishing vessels and the environment.
Most containers won't float for long,
especially in heavy seas. But one that is refrigerated may be buoyed by its
insulation, and the use of polystyrene as packaging for goods also aids
flotation. New Zealand marine insurer Vero Marine says a 20-foot container can
float for up to two months, and a 40-foot container might float more than three
times as long.
Cargo spills and shipping hazards
These rogue containers can pose a danger to
shipping and pollute the environment. In 2006, thousands of bags of Doritos
chips washed up on the beaches of North Carolina's Outer Banks -- much to the delight
of local gulls -- after the container carrying them split apart in the
Atlantic. More famously, in 1992, a container broke apart off the coast of
Alaska, and 29,000 plastic ducks and frogs escaped. They've been
washing up as far away as Scotland and Japan ever since.
There is no requirement on shipping lines to
report container losses to the International Maritime Organization or other
international body, so no one seems to know how many containers are lost at sea
every year. In 2011, the World Shipping Council estimated that including "catastrophic losses" such
as the capsizing of a vessel, about 675 containers were lost at sea annually.
The Through Transport Club, which insures 15
of the top 20 container lines, has put the loss at fewer than 2,000 containers
a year. But other industry sources say the number may be as high as 10,000.
That would still represent far less than 1% of the containers traversing the
world's oceans. Maersk, one of the world's largest lines, says that its highest
annual loss in the last decade was 59 containers.
But the hazard is still real enough. In
recent years, several small vessels have reported damage after hitting
semi-submerged containers. During his solo voyage around the world, American
sailor Paul Lutus wrote that "one night in the Indian Ocean, I hit a
waterlogged shipping container that was too low in the water to show up on
radar." His 31-foot boat was damaged but stayed afloat.
Container weight an issue
Shipping analysts say that one issue
affecting the stability of container stacks is that the steel boxes -- 20 to 40
feet long -- are not accurately weighed. They say some shippers frequently
understate the weight of their containers to reduce freight charges. Not
knowing how much your cargo weighs can introduce all sorts of problems in terms
of the stress a vessel must endure at sea.
Three years ago, a proposal was put to the
International Maritime Organization for containers to be weighed before being
loaded. But nothing has been agreed, and many shipping associations object to
such a proposal as expensive and time-consuming.
Even so, one current investigation may focus
more attention on the loading of containers. Last June, the 90,000-ton MOL
Comfort literally snapped in half 200 miles off the coast of Yemen. The ship,
built in Japan, was only 5 years old. Both sections of the Comfort, as well as
4,500 containers, went to the ocean floor. One factor being investigated is
whether uneven loading of containers contributed to intolerable stresses on the
hull.
It would not be the first such disaster.
Seven years ago, the 62,000-ton MSC Napoli suffered catastrophic hull failure
and ran aground off the English coast. A report by the UK Marine Accident
Investigation Board concluded that inaccurate information about container weights
could have been critical, given that cargo ships often sail close to
their maximum permissible "bending moments," which measure the
external stress on a vessel.
The investigation recommended that "if
the stresses acting on container ships are to be accurately controlled, it is
essential that containers are weighed before embarkation" and criticized
the industry's "overriding desire" to maintain schedules and keep
port time to a minimum.
The cost of salvage and cargo came to nearly
$200 million.
An interim report into the sinking of the MOL
Comfort by the Japanese Transport Ministry -- published in December -- also
called for the weight of containers to be verified before loading to reduce
uncertainty about ships' bending moments.
But a definitive answer to the Comfort's
demise may never be known, as much of the evidence lies deep under the Indian
Ocean's waves.
Source : CNN, 22.02.14.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar