• Crews struggle to drain oil-leaking ship off New Zealand
    24 replies, posted
[B]'We cannot pin time frames on things, that ship is very, very dangerous,' salvage company official says [/B] Source: [url=http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/44900480/ns/today-today_news/t/crews-struggle-drain-oil-leaking-ship-new-zealand/#.TpiuLLKRp8F]MSNBC[/url] [release]TAURANGA, New Zealand — The calmest weather in days has given salvage crews hope they will be able on Friday to resume pumping the remaining fuel from a cargo ship stuck on a New Zealand reef. The ship Rena has already spilled hundreds of tons of oil and crews are in a race against nature to try and remove the remaining fuel before waves break up the vessel, which has begun to crack apart and is leaning on a 22-degree tilt. Liberian-flagged Rena has been stuck for nine days on a reef 14 miles off the east coast of New Zealand's North Island, spilling about 300 tons of heavy toxic fuel and some of its hundreds of containers into the sea. Authorities say the 775-foot ship was in a precarious position, as salvage teams prepared to cut holes in the stern to get to the tanks holding more than 1,000 tons of fuel. "What's holding the vessel together at the moment is the fact she's lying on the reef and some internal structures, companionways, ducting and the like inside the vessel," Maritime NZ spokesman Andrew Berry told a meeting of local residents. The salvage teams are working to install equipment and platforms on the high side of the aft section of the listing 47,230-ton ship so they have a level surface to work on. Environmentalists have warned of a disaster for wildlife if all the ship's 1,870 tons of oil and 220 tons of diesel is allowed to spill into the ocean. [img]http://msnbcmedia1.msn.com/j/MSNBC/Components/Photo/_new/111014-nz-ship-hlarge-145a.grid-7x2.jpg[/img] Waves wash the Papamoa Beach dirtied Thursday with fuel oil from the Liberian-flagged container ship Rena, which has been stuck aground on a reef off the coast of Tauranga, New Zealand. [B]PhotoBlog: Stricken ship sheds containers as crack appears in hull[/B] "There is some hope ... they might be able to start pumping oil tomorrow, but we cannot pin time frames on things, that ship is very, very dangerous," said Matthew Watson of the Svitzer salvage company. He said oil leaks from the ship have slowed and there was a "reasonable level of confidence" that the stern tanks are intact and would hold. Oil has washed up along about 37 miles of the coast, which is popular with surfers and fishermen. Last week crews removed about 10 tons of oil before the weather forced them to postpone salvage attempts. [B]'Relatively positive'[/B] Nick Bohm, a spokesman for Maritime New Zealand which is managing the emergency response, told The Associated Press Friday that crews are "relatively positive" they can proceed with plans to board the vessel and begin pumping oil to a nearby barge. He said pumping should begin Friday afternoon in an operation that could last several days. Meanwhile, several of the 88 containers that have fallen off its deck had washed ashore by Friday, and authorities confirmed one container that toppled overboard contained a hazardous substance. However, an official said it should not pose a major threat. [img]http://msnbcmedia2.msn.com/j/ap/aptopix%20new%20zealand%20grounded%20ship--901670897_v2.grid-6x2.jpg[/img] Image: Waves wash the Papamoa Beach dirtied with fuel oil Waves wash the Papamoa Beach dirtied Thursday with fuel oil from the Liberian-flagged container ship Rena, which has been stuck aground on a reef off the coast of Tauranga, New Zealand. Bohm said the stronger winds forecast for the weekend may hamper the operation. An estimated 1,000 white-suited workers, including soldiers, wildlife experts and residents, were on the beaches scraping and collecting clumps of the foul-smelling fuel oil cargo wreckage from the ship. More than 220 tons of waste, including oil and debris from the ship, have been cleared from the beaches. Residents said the beaches were looking cleaner as the winds were now blowing oil out to sea allowing clean-up teams to make progress. "It's much better than it has been, not that much oil is coming (on shore) and we seem to be getting on top of it," said resident Liz Bridgeman. Authorities said more than 3,000 people had volunteered to help clean up the coast and teams were being trained to go where needed. [B]Crack runs around vessel[/B] A vertical crack in the ship runs around the entire vessel — meaning the ship is now only held together by its internal components, said Steve Jones, another spokesman for Maritime New Zealand. "The reality is the vessel could break up at any point," Jones told The Associated Press. Six vessels have been mobilized to intercept the drifting containers and other debris in the water. There were 1,368 containers on board, 11 of which contained hazardous substances, Maritime New Zealand said. Bohm said the container with hazardous material that fell overboard held alkyl sulfonic acid, which can be harmful in its original state, but becomes less toxic when diluted with water. The whereabouts of that container are unknown. [B]Story: New Zealand charges captain as crack appears in stricken ship[/B] Some of the contents of containers that had washed ashore were strewn across the coastline this week, including thousands of meat patties that littered the sand. The ship's 44-year-old Filipino captain was charged Wednesday with operating a vessel in a manner causing unnecessary danger or risk and was released on bail Wednesday at Tauranga District Court. The ship's second officer appeared in the same court Thursday on the same charge. Judge Robert Wolff made orders suppressing publication of the defendants' names for the sake of their personal safety. If convicted, each could face a fine of up to 10,000 New Zealand dollars ($7,800) and 12 months in prison. Their next court appearance is Oct. 19, when authorities say more charges are likely. The government has demanded to know why the ship crashed into the well-charted reef in calm weather, but the vessel's owner, Greece-based Costamare Inc., has given no explanation. Costamare released a statement this week apologizing for the incident and said it was investigating how the ship could have run aground. "Our Captain is an experienced Master and has an exemplary record," Costamare managing director Diamantis Manos said in the statement. "The ship was fully certified and had recently been inspected ... They found no problems. Obviously something went very wrong and we will cooperate with the Transport Accident Investigation Commission of New Zealand (TAIC) to find the answer." But the mayor of Tauranga dismissed an apology from the ship's owners. "It's half an apology and a lot of excuse, no it's not good enough, I'd like to see the ship's owner come to Tauranga and stand up in front of our people," Stuart Crosby said on TVNZ. 'We cannot pin time frames on things, that ship is very, very dangerous,' salvage company official says [/release] He's getting off easy on a $10k bond and a year in prison. Very easy.
Heavy Oil sucks. If only we could run ships off Hydrogen. Surely spilling thousands of gallons of Hydrogen into the ocean would have less catastrophic effects than oil.
Meh doesn't concern me at all, the oceans especially the pacific is a lost cause biologically.
[QUOTE=Folgergeist;32785868]Meh doesn't concern me at all, the oceans especially the pacific is a lost cause biologically.[/QUOTE] Smoking doesn't really concern me my lungs are a lost cause biologically. Over 70 percent of the world catch from the sea comes from the Pacific Ocean. Over half the worlds oxygen is supplied by the Ocean. Reefs are more biologically diverse than the Amazon Rain Forest. Millions of people make a living from the Ocean. Many countries entire economies depend on the Ocean. This "lost cause" is the life blood of our entire planet. Without it, we will die. The human species as we know it will be unable to exist. And millions, if not billions of life forms will go extinct. The health of the ocean should be our number one cause as a species.
[QUOTE=OvB;32785591]Heavy Oil sucks. If only we could run ships off Hydrogen. Surely spilling thousands of gallons of Hydrogen into the ocean would have less catastrophic effects than oil.[/QUOTE] I dont think it would have any effect, hydrogen is a gas in normal conditions.
[QUOTE=viperfan7;32786762]I dont think it would have any effect, hydrogen is a gas in normal conditions.[/QUOTE] Wouldn't it be stored as a liquid to increase storage capacity?
[QUOTE=OvB;32786732]Smoking doesn't really concern me my lungs are a lost cause biologically. Over 70 percent of the world catch from the sea comes from the Pacific Ocean. Over half the worlds oxygen is supplied by the Ocean. Reefs are more biologically diverse than the Amazon Rain Forest. Millions of people make a living from the Ocean. Many countries entire economies depend on the Ocean. This "lost cause" is the life blood of our entire planet. Without it, we will die. The human species as we know it will be unable to exist. And millions, if not billions of life forms will go extinct. The health of the ocean should be our number one cause as a species.[/QUOTE] I hear coral reefs will be non existent by 2020 The entire pacific is a garbage dumb permanently polluted by plastic waste and photo degraded shards. All beaches in and around the pacific are blanketed by trash / plastic The ocean is being used as a free-for-all pantry and it's only going to get worse since the human population is at 7 billion and raising at an astronomical rate every day. Lost cause kiddo
[QUOTE=Folgergeist;32786919]I hear coral reefs will be non existent by 2020 The entire pacific is a garbage dumb permanently polluted by plastic waste and photo degraded shards. All beaches in and around the pacific are blanketed by trash / plastic The ocean is being used as a free-for-all pantry and it's only going to get worse since the human population is at 7 billion and raising at an astronomical rate every day. Lost cause kiddo[/QUOTE] So lets sit back and watch as we destroy the global economy and slowly kill ourselves. Sweet plan, kiddo.
[QUOTE=Folgergeist;32785868]Meh doesn't concern me at all, the oceans especially the pacific is a lost cause biologically.[/QUOTE] Wow, go fuck your self dick.
damn, it seems like yesterday that we just got over the last big-spill too [QUOTE=Folgergeist;32785868]Meh doesn't concern me at all[/QUOTE][QUOTE=Folgergeist;32786919]Lost cause kiddo[/QUOTE] uhm, so I have a request, and I want to approach it in the kindliest manor possible. Could you uhh.. please [B]leave[/B], the human race? Not to be rude or anything, we just need as least of you kinds of people as possible thanks<3
[img]http://i2.listal.com/image/1266300/936full-terry-crews.jpg[/img] crews
[QUOTE=doctorjohndorian;32788477][img]http://i2.listal.com/image/1266300/936full-terry-crews.jpg[/img] crews[/QUOTE] You racist little shit!
[QUOTE=Michael haxz;32788523]You racist little shit![/QUOTE] what
I love how everyone is either "lol fukit" or "SAEV THE OCEAN!!11" Allow me to be the middle ground, Yes the pacific is polluted, but cleaning it is a major option. However it shouldn't be our main scientific focus as a species.
I wonder what the qualifications are to be the guy that gets dropped by helicopter onto a sinking ship. Sounds like a fun job.
[QUOTE=Used Car Salesman;32789996]I wonder what the qualifications are to be the guy that gets dropped by helicopter onto a sinking ship. Sounds like a fun job.[/QUOTE] Join the Coast Guard.
[QUOTE=Folgergeist;32785868]Meh doesn't concern me at all, the oceans especially the pacific is a lost cause biologically.[/QUOTE] Eat a dick, cunt. Funny that when it's a little ol' island in the south pacific that's having a disaster, very few people give a shit, or even advocate just leaving it as it is. Because who cares, right? New Zealand's population is only 4 million, it's not like they need it?
There goes any chances of staying at the beach this summer. :saddowns:
[QUOTE=Folgergeist;32786919]I hear coral reefs will be non existent by 2020 The entire pacific is a garbage dumb permanently polluted by plastic waste and photo degraded shards. All beaches in and around the pacific are blanketed by trash / plastic The ocean is being used as a free-for-all pantry and it's only going to get worse since the human population is at 7 billion and raising at an astronomical rate every day. Lost cause kiddo[/QUOTE] ....[citation needed]
[QUOTE=OvB;32786990]So lets sit back and watch as we destroy the global economy and slowly kill ourselves. Sweet plan, kiddo.[/QUOTE] Not my plan kiddo.
[QUOTE=Folgergeist;32797691]Not my plan kiddo.[/QUOTE] Yet you seem to agree with and support it. [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Pacific_Garbage_Patch]Also:[/url]
[QUOTE=Vollybomb;32797989]Yet you seem to agree with and support it. [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Pacific_Garbage_Patch]Also:[/url][/QUOTE] no i just acknowledge it as a reality I never once said in any way that I support it what are you even talking about
[img]https://fbcdn-sphotos-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash4/320903_259002697477834_100001043165310_759472_936848071_n.jpg[/img]
[QUOTE=Sleepy Head;32791825]....[citation needed][/QUOTE] [img]http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/wikipedian_protester.png[/img]
they really should just ignite the oil problem solved
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