The Pilot Who Stranded That Massive Cargo Ship Was An
Expert 'Who Knew What He Was Doing'
To non-professionals, it looks like a disaster: The Höegh
Osaka, a large car-carrier currently sitting lopsided in shallow water off the
port of Southampton, was beached by its crew on Saturday night and images of
the ship — just sitting there, half-sunk in the Solent — have dominated the UK
media ever since.But the deliberate decision to run the boat aground was not an
unhappy accident.
Sunday, 11.Jan.2015, 11:19 (GMT)
To non-professionals, it looks like a disaster: The Höegh
Osaka, a large car-carrier currently sitting lopsided in shallow water off the
port of Southampton, was beached by its crew on Saturday night and images of
the ship — just sitting there, half-sunk in the Solent — have dominated the UK
media ever since.But the deliberate decision to run the boat aground was not an
unhappy accident.
Rather, it was a mastery of piloting and ship handling.
"Things could have been much worse," says the chairman of the UK
Maritime Pilots' Association (UKMPA).The ship's company said in a statement
that the captain and the pilot of the Höegh Osaka noticed that the ship was
dangerously listing to one side, and decided to strand her deliberately in
order to prevent further damage.Business Insider spoke with Captain Don
Cockrill, a professional pilot at the Port of London and chairman of UKMPA, to
figure out what actually happened on board. "The quick thinking, decisions
and actions of the Southampton port pilot on board the Höegh Osaka with the
ship’s captain and his team resulted not only in the prevention of a major
catastrophic event for the ship, but most importantly, saving the lives of the
25 crew members." he said.
Cockrill explained that every time a ship of that size is
leaving a port, the captain is helped by a professional pilot from the same
port, who literally drives the vessel to safe waters.It is a tough job:
"ships grow bigger and bigger, but the ports have remained the same as decades
ago," Cockrill said. It is like having the same garage, but buying a
larger car: it might fit, but it's harder to drive in.Cockrill reconstructed
what happened on the Höegh Osaka on Saturday night: the operators would have
rapidly realised that something was going wrong and the ship was listing
dangerously.Before losing control of the vessel, the pilot and the captain
decided to run aground on shallow waters, where the bottom of the sea is higher
and the Höegh Osaka could easily be stranded safely.
According to Cockrill, the instability was not apparent
until rounding the Bramble Bank bend so about an hour after it left Southampton
at 8.20 p.m.: The pilot would have had only seconds to decide they had to beach
the vessel, give orders to the crew, plot a course to the bank, and then
successful "park" the ship on top of it.As well as lowering the
safety risk for the crew, it also kept the navigation channel towards the port
open. In fact Southampton port is now operating as per usual — despite the massive
shipwreck a few hundred yards from its mouth.If the ship had capsized, the
crew's lives would have been at serious risk; the cargo likely lost; and
Southampton port would have been clogged for days. "Thankfully, there was
a very expert pilot on board, who knew what he was doing," Cockrill said.
Concerning what might have caused the lifting in the
first stance, "it is all related to the stability of the ship,"
Cockrill said. "We are talking of a big ship, but not extremely huge, and
the analysis did not reveal any mechanical issue so far. It is more likely that
some tanks of fuel or water towards the bottom were half full, prompting a
certain instability. The effect of a sudden crash of water on one side or the
other is far greater than you expect, even for such a big
ship."Reuters/Peter NichollsOn Monday salvage experts from Svitzer, a
vessel rescuing company, were on board the Höegh Osaka to assess the damage and
inspect the cargo, the BBC reported. A press conference at the Grand Harbour
Hotel in Southampton on Monday evening confirmed that the salvage experts could
decide to start working on the vessel tomorrow.
That would involve
towing the ship on higher waters and slowly putting back afloat, an operation
that could solve the situation by Wednesday at noon,when the tide is the
highest. At the same time, weather and tidal conditions play a major role in
this sort of operations and the team is also considering to leave the vessel
anchored where it currently stands for now and wait for more favourable conditions.
This, though, could take months, The Telegraph wrote.There are about 1,400
vehicles on board, including 1,200 Jaguar and Land Rover first-class cars, 65
BMW Minis, and 105 JCB agricultural machines.
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/pilot-of-hoegh-osaka-prevented-tragedy-2015-1#ixzz3OVjMs8H2
STEFANO POZZEBON , Business Insider.
Source : SN-TR.
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