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Month: January 2014

Tale of Three Tugs

Tale of Three Tugs

Photo: nsnews.com
Photo: nsnews.com

The 112 year old, 74 foot tugboat Elf sank twice in three days.  The first was in Mamquam Blind Channel in Squamish on January 14.  The tug spilt some 1500 litres of diesel fuel and lubricant oil.   The Coast Guard placed booms around the sunken vessel to contain the pollution.  The Elf was later raised using a barge and crane.  It was surveyed and no cause for the sinking was determined.  The Elf was taken under tow and was headed to a shipyard on the Fraser River when the tug sank again off Point Atkinson, British Columbia. The tugboat sank and rests some 120 meters below the surface.  No reports of injuries.  Reports state the cause of the sinkings remains unknown.

Photo: cbc.ca
Photo: cbc.ca

A 52 foot tugboat sank on the Fraser River on January 22 near Richmond, British Columbia.  The tugboat had been at anchor when the vessel anchor dragged allowing the vessel to go adrift.  The vessel drifted until it collided with a piling and began to take on water.  The tug eventually sank.  No reports of injuries.  A small amount of pollution was released.

On January 20, a tugboat and coal barge sank on the Batanghari River near Jambi, Indonesia. The tug and barge were proceeding down the river when the tug became unstable by the river current and capsized.  The tug struck the barge and both sank.  Two men were reported missing presumed lost.

 

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KM Sahabat Sinks

KM Sahabat Sinks

Sahabat

The 72 meter long, 541 dwt ro-ro ferry KM Sahabat sank off Jakarta, Indonesia.  The ferry was en route to Tanjung Pinang with 139 passengers and 26 crew in calm seas.  An hour into its journey the weather worsened.   Waves reached 5 meters causing the vessel to lose steerage.  The KM Sahabat capsized onto its starboard side.   The master ordered crew and passengers to don life jackets and abandon ship into the vessel’s life raft.  An SOS signal was sent out and 3 to 4 hours later several tugboats arrived on scene.  Seven people were reported missing.  Three  others were rescued and taken to hospital for injuries.

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Vina Express 01

Vina Express 01

vinaexpress

The 25 meter long high-speed passenger ship Vina Express 01 was lost on the Saigon River near Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.  The hydrofoil had departed from Ho Chi Minh City with 92 people on board bound for Vung Tau when a fire broke out in the engine room.  The fire quickly grew out of control and soon the vessel was engulfed in flames.   The master of the vessel drove the vessel onto the river bank to let passengers escaped.  No reports of injuries as all 85 passengers and 7 crew escaped unharmed.  The Vina Express 01 continued to burn to the waters edge before it sank.  Authorities have suspended operations for all other hydrofoils in the area.

 

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