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Chemical Tanker Explosion in the Atlantic

Posted on 02/29/2004 6:03:21 PM PST by danamco

3 Killed, 18 Missing in Va. Tanker Blast

Feb 29, 1:01 PM (ET)

By SONJA BARISIC

(AP) The Bow Mariner, a chemical tanker sinks after an explosion off the coast of Virginia, Saturday,... Full Image

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP) - The Coast Guard searched the frigid Atlantic Sunday for 18 crew members of a tanker that exploded while carrying 3.5 million gallons of ethanol. Three crewmen were known dead and six others were rescued.

"Our first and foremost concern will be finding the 18 people that are missing," Coast Guard spokeswoman Krys Hannum said.

Hannum said there was no reason to believe the explosion was anything other than an accident.

Two Coast Guard patrol boats and a C-130 airplane and helicopter were conducting the search about 50 miles off Virginia's Eastern Shore.

(AP) The Bow Mariner, a chemical tanker sinks after an explosion off the coast of Virginia, Saturday,... Full Image

"We're going to search as long as it's reasonable and hope they're alive," she said.

But with water temperatures below 50 degrees, the likelihood of additional survivors being found grew increasingly slim. Hannum said some of the crew members were sleeping at the time of the explosion and some were on deck, so it's unlikely that they were wearing gear that would protect them from the cold water.

The survivors were rescued from a life raft within three hours of the accident and flown to Sentara Norfolk General Hospital. They were treated for conditions including hypothermia and had to be decontaminated after being found covered with a petroleum-based substance.

One survivor was in serious condition, two were in fair condition and the three others were released Sunday morning, hospital spokeswoman Vicky Gray said. Two Coast Guard personnel treated for minor injuries also were released.

"They look like they've been through an ordeal and they're very introspective about what happened," Gray said of the rescued crewmen, who are Filipino and did not speak English. "They're very quiet, subdued, like you would expect."

(AP) The Bow Mariner, a chemical tanker sinks after an explosion off the coast of Virginia, Saturday,... Full Image

The crew members have declined interview requests, Gray said. Hospital chaplains helped the crew talk to their families in the Philippines by telephone.

Coast Guard officials said that most of the ethanol spewed from the tanker had evaporated, but fuel from the ship's storage tanks has formed a 9-square-mile oil slick in the Atlantic.

Guardsmen don't yet know how much of the fuel aboard the ship spilled; but they say it was carrying 48,000 gallons of stored diesel fuel and 193,000 gallons of fuel oil.

Environmental officials are most concerned about the fuel oil, a sticky, heavy, molasses-like substance that was used to power the vessel.

"That's what we're really keeping an eye on. We don't want that stuff to reach the shoreline," said Mike Sharon, chief of the emergency response division of the Maryland Department of the Environment.

(AP) Surviving crewmen from the 570-foot tanker Bow Mariner are shown in this video image arriving at... Full Image

Computer models drawn by scientists at the Coast Guard and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predict the spill will wash out to sea and not glom onto the shores of Maryland or Virginia, said Chief Warrant Officer Gene Maestas of the Coast Guard.

The 570-foot Bow Mariner was en route from New York to Houston Saturday when it sank in 200 feet of water. Lt. Chris Shaffer of Ocean City (Md.) Emergency Services said the explosion came after a fire started on the deck of the ship.

The ship is a chemical tanker built in 1982 and is managed by a Greek company, Ceres Hellenic Shipping Enterprises Ltd. A company spokesman said the ship had a crew of 24 Filipinos and three Greeks.

A spokesman for Norway-based Odfjell, the commercial operator and owner of the Singapore-flagged ship, declined to speculate on what caused the accident.

"We are very grieved about having to report that Bow Mariner has gone down and that many seamen have lost their lives," company chairman Dan Odfjell said.

(AP) Rescue personnel wheel a victim of a tanker explosion into the Norfolk Sentara General Hospital... Full Image

Tony Redding, spokesman for Ceres Hellenic, said the company was sending a technical crew from Greece on Sunday to assist the Coast Guard. Odfjell hired Marine Spill Response Corporation, which dispatched a cleanup ship to standby, Sharon said.

The Bow Mariner underwent two routine inspections in 2003, Ceres Hellenic said in a statement. No problems were found in January, and five minor deficiencies were found in October, including a defective crew shower and the need to update a log book. The issues were corrected and the ship sailed without delay, the company said.

Scientists with the Coast Guard's Marine Safety Office were preparing the environmental cleanup, Maestas said. A likely method would be using inflatable booms to surround the spill and shift it toward pumps that would skim the oil and funnel it into a nearby barge, he said.

Ethanol, an alcohol-based fuel additive made from corn and other starch crops, is considered environmentally clean. It is water-soluble and isn't floating atop the waters of the Atlantic, Sharon said.

"Because it mixes with the water, it's got the whole ocean to dilute it out," he said. "You don't see the kind of containment issues you have with oil."


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: bowmariner

1 posted on 02/29/2004 6:03:21 PM PST by danamco
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To: danamco
As a former ships officer in the merchant marine this seems very "fishy" to me. I have many years experience on tanker vessels which are considered very safe! "Terrorists???"
2 posted on 02/29/2004 6:06:13 PM PST by danamco
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To: danamco
Any potential connection to the dead scuba diver in New York?
3 posted on 02/29/2004 6:11:27 PM PST by Knute
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To: danamco
From Fox news:

Search Suspended for 18 Missing After Tanker Blast

Sunday, February 29, 2004

PORTSMOUTH, Va.  — The Coast Guard (search) on Sunday night suspended the search for 18 crew members missing from an ethanol-laden tanker that exploded in the Atlantic Ocean, and were unsure whether search efforts would resume Monday morning.

The Coast Guard will decide whether to continue the search after a crew flies over the area Monday morning, Chief Warrant Officer Gene Maestas said.

"Realistically, the longer the search goes on, the less likely it is that we will find anyone who is still alive," Rear Adm. Sally Brice-O'Hara, commander of the Coast Guard's 5th District, said at a news briefing earlier Sunday.

The Bow Mariner, a tanker carrying 3.5 million gallons of ethanol, exploded and sank Saturday night about 50 miles off Virginia's Eastern Shore. Three men died and six were rescued.

Three of the survivors were released Sunday from Sentara Norfolk General Hospital. The others were in good condition and could be released Monday morning, hospital spokeswoman Ann Keffer said.

Two Coast Guard workers were treated for minor injuries.

Coast Guard officials were investigating the cause of the explosion. Coast Guard spokeswoman Krys Hannum said there was no reason to believe it was anything other than an accident.

Two Coast Guard patrol boats, a helicopter and a C-130 airplane searched Sunday, but with water temperatures below 50 degrees, the likelihood of additional survivors being found grew increasingly slim.

Hannum said some of the crew members were sleeping at the time of the explosion and some were on deck, so it's unlikely that they were wearing gear that would protect them from the cold water.

The survivors were treated for conditions including hypothermia and had to be decontaminated after being found covered with a petroleum-based substance.

"They look like they've been through an ordeal and they're very introspective about what happened," hospital spokeswoman Vicky Gray said of the rescued crewmen, who are Filipino and did not speak English. "They're very quiet, subdued, like you would expect."

The crew members have declined interview requests, Gray said. Hospital chaplains helped the crew talk to their families in the Philippines by telephone.

Coast Guard officials said that most of the ethanol spewed from the tanker had evaporated, but fuel from the ship's storage tanks has formed a 9-square-mile oil slick in the Atlantic.

Guardsmen don't yet know how much of the fuel aboard the ship spilled; but they say it was carrying 48,000 gallons of stored diesel fuel and 193,000 gallons of fuel oil.

Environmental officials are most concerned about the fuel oil, a sticky, heavy, molasses-like substance that was used to power the vessel.

"That's what we're really keeping an eye on. We don't want that stuff to reach the shoreline," said Mike Sharon, chief of the emergency response division of the Maryland Department of the Environment (search).

Computer models drawn by scientists at the Coast Guard and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (search) predict the spill will wash out to sea and not glom onto the shores of Maryland or Virginia, said Chief Warrant Officer Gene Maestas of the Coast Guard.

The 570-foot Bow Mariner was en route from New York to Houston Saturday when it sank in 200 feet of water. Lt. Chris Shaffer of Ocean City (Md.) Emergency Services said the explosion came after a fire started on the deck of the ship.

The ship is a chemical tanker built in 1982 and is managed by a Greek company, Ceres Hellenic Shipping Enterprises Ltd (search). A company spokesman said the ship had a crew of 24 Filipinos and three Greeks.

A spokesman for Norway-based Odfjell, the commercial operator and owner of the Singapore-flagged ship, declined to speculate on what caused the accident.

"We are very grieved about having to report that Bow Mariner has gone down and that many seamen have lost their lives," company chairman Dan Odfjell said.

Tony Redding, spokesman for Ceres Hellenic, said the company was sending a technical crew from Greece on Sunday to assist the Coast Guard. Odfjell hired Marine Spill Response Corporation, which dispatched a cleanup ship to standby, Sharon said.

The Bow Mariner underwent two routine inspections in 2003, Ceres Hellenic said in a statement. No problems were found in January, and five minor deficiencies were found in October, including a defective crew shower and the need to update a log book. The issues were corrected and the ship sailed without delay, the company said.

Scientists with the Coast Guard's Marine Safety Office were preparing the environmental cleanup, Maestas said. A likely method would be using inflatable booms to surround the spill and shift it toward pumps that would skim the oil and funnel it into a nearby barge, he said.

Ethanol, an alcohol-based fuel additive made from corn and other starch crops, is considered environmentally clean. It is water-soluble and isn't floating atop the waters of the Atlantic, Sharon said.

"Because it mixes with the water, it's got the whole ocean to dilute it out," he said. "You don't see the kind of containment issues you have with oil."

4 posted on 02/29/2004 6:14:57 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (The terrorists and their supporters declared war on the United States - and war is what they got!!!!)
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To: danamco
Courtesy of Yahoo/AP
5 posted on 02/29/2004 6:18:44 PM PST by BenLurkin (Socialism is slavery.)
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To: danamco
I would imagine that Teddy 'Booze' Kennedy will want an investigation, with all that alcohol going to waste.
6 posted on 02/29/2004 6:19:55 PM PST by punster
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To: Knute
Any potential connection to the dead scuba diver in New York?



When did that happened??
7 posted on 02/29/2004 6:58:19 PM PST by danamco
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To: danamco
The body was found last Sunday. Here is a short excerpt from the article-

"NEWBURGH, New York (24 Feb 2004) -- Here's a mystery that would
challenge even Sherlock Holmes.

A man's body is found floating in the Hudson River. He's wearing a diving
mask and scuba gear.

But it's February, a time of year in the Northeast when only members of
the Polar Bear Club – or actual polar bears – are likely to venture into the
water.

That's the mystery that federal and local investigators were still trying to
solve yesterday afternoon. The man's body was first spotted Sunday
morning by the crew of a Cyprus-based ship that had just delivered a load
of coal to Dynegy's Danskammer power plant.
More..."
8 posted on 02/29/2004 11:12:48 PM PST by Knute
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To: danamco
The 570-foot Bow Mariner was en route from New York to Houston Saturday when it sank in 200 feet of water.

This ship was foreign-flagged (singapore, I think I read). When did they begin to allow foreign-flag vessels to sail coastwise?

9 posted on 02/29/2004 11:22:41 PM PST by orlop9
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To: orlop9
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000103&sid=aSemB.VWIS2g&refer=us

Ethanol Tanker Explodes Off Virginia, Killing Three -
The tanker, owned by Norwegian shipper Odfjell ASA and registered in
Singapore, was en route to Houston from New York City carrying 3.5 million
gallons of ethanol.
10 posted on 02/29/2004 11:24:43 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: danamco; Cincinatus' Wife
Please correct me if I'm wrong but I think it's still illegal for a foreign-flag to sail coastwise. Considering the Nat'l Security issues and the ships cargo, I'm curious as to why nobody is asking questions about it.

http://www.marad.dot.gov/publications/primer_laws.html
11 posted on 03/01/2004 12:34:18 AM PST by orlop9
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To: orlop9
I know this happens all the time so I'm sure it is not illegal. Is your link mainly about fishing? Tankers continuously run up and down our coasts and into the Gulf of Mexico.
12 posted on 03/01/2004 12:45:34 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920...Basically, it provides that merchandise transported entirely or partly by water between U.S. points--either directly or via a foreign point--must travel in U.S.-built, U.S.-citizen owned vessels that are U.S.-documented by the Coast Guard for such carriage.
13 posted on 03/01/2004 12:57:26 AM PST by orlop9
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To: orlop9
Well, there must be some other guideline because Maritime law is strictly enforced. These tankers run this route all the time.
14 posted on 03/01/2004 1:01:42 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: danamco
As a former ships officer in the merchant marine this seems very "fishy" to me. I have many years experience on tanker vessels which are considered very safe! "Terrorists???"

I'd want to know from exactly where in the Phillipines all of the crew is from. If any are from Mindanao I'd be very suspicious.

15 posted on 03/01/2004 1:11:26 AM PST by Heatseeker
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