Het stranden van de erts tanker WAKASHIO is ook weer in het nieuws
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MV Wakashio oil spill: A timeline of events in an environmental disaster
Almost seven months after the Japanese capsize bulk carrier MV Wakashio ran aground in an environmentally sensitive area off Mauritius, several scenarios as to what led to the incident have come to the surface, but an official cause of the accident is yet to be determined.
MARITIME KNOWLEDGE | 11/02/21
To remind, the bulk carrier MV Wakashio ran aground off Mauritius early in the evening of 25 July 2020, attracting significant media attention for several weeks following the occurrence, as fuel oil started leaking from the vessel in the environmentally sensitive region and adverse weather conditions impeded proper response.
Timeline of events
-4 Jul: The Panamanian-flagged MV Wakashio departs from Lianyungang, China, bound for Tubarão, Brazil, with 20 crew onboard and no cargo, but having 3,894 tonnes of low-sulphur fuel oil, 207 tonnes of diesel and 90 tonnes of lube oil onboard.
-14 Jul: The ship stops in Singapore for fueling.
-25 Jul: The ship runs aground on a coral reef off the nation island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. There are no injuries and the crew remains onboard.
-28 Jul: Addressing the Parliament, Mauritius’ Minister of the Environment, Kavi Ramano, says there is no oil spill as a result from the incident, but only traces of hydrocarbons in algae over 300 meters.
-6 Aug: Oil begins to leak from the vessel, while Mauritius authorities are trying to control the spill.
-7 Aug: The island of Mauritius declares a “state of environmental emergency”, fearing of huge damage to the country’s coastal waters and marine wildlife.
-10 Aug: About 1,000 metric tons of fuel have already spilled, with estimates of the remaining oil onboard ranging from 2,500 to 3,000 metric tons. Meanwhile, inclement weather with high waves triggers worries of a potential vessel crack.
-12 Aug: In a race against time, an estimated 3,000 tonnes of fuel are successfully removed from the ship. The fuel is transferred to shore by helicopter and to another ship also owned by Nagashiki Shipping.
-15 Aug: The ship breaks in two with 166 tons of fuel onboard. Waves 4.5 metres high hinder cleanup.
-17 Aug: IMO announces it has deployed an expert, jointly with the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UN OCHA), who is advising the Government of Mauritius on the mitigation of the impacts on the environment and coastal communities.
-18 Aug: Authorities arrest the bulk carrier’s 58-year-old Captain, charging him with endangering safe navigation.
-19 Aug: NGO Greenpeace warns of the severe environmental consequences after the government's decision to sink the front part of the vessel.
-22 Aug: Operations to sink the forward part of the ill-fated vessel are completed, despite environmental concerns.
-26-28 Aug: At least 40 dead dolphins gradually wash up on Mauritius’s shore, spurring suspicions that the oil spill is to blame, with officials characterizing the incident a “sad coincidence.”
-29 Aug: Thousands of people demonstrate in Mauritius over the government’s handling of the incident.
-31 Aug: A tugboat working on the wreck site sinks after colliding with a barge in heavy weather, killing at least three.
-8 Sept: The Panama Maritime Authority, collaborating in the accident investigation, issues the first official statement, attributing the grounding to wrong charts.
-5 Nov: Japanese shipowner, Nagashiki Shipping, appoints Chinese salvor, Lianyungang Dali Underwater Engineering, to start the removal operations for the stern of the ship.
-18 Dec: Japanese MOL, the charterer of the vessel, releases internal investigation report on the incident, identifying the crew's unsafe behavior probable cause of the incident, and issues a series of safety measures to prevent such incidents in the future. The measures announced aim, among others, to address the lack of safety awareness and boost ship operation quality.
-6 Jan: A Forbes report suggests that oil major BP supplied unsafe very low sulfur fuel oil to Wakashio before its final voyage causing the ship to experience a serious engine failure and that it has blocked the investigation into the fuel that was being used onboard. The same report claims MOL was aware that the oil exceeded engine safety limits and was concerned during the Wakashio’s final voyage that this fuel could cause engine failure, which they attempted to communicate to the crew.
-12 Jan: BP denies the reports characterizing them as “baseless allegations and insinuations”, confirming it supplied fuel to the vessel, but clarifying that the fuel supplied was fully in line with the specified standard.
-18 Jan: MOL also rejects the allegations, noting there have been no mechanical issues involved in the grounding, which appears "to have been solely due to safety and navigational issues".
-25 Jan: Satellite data by British satellite analytics company Geollect refuels the debate, revealing the Wakashio appears to have suffered an engine failure prior to its grounding.
Probable causes - What is known so far
Pending an official investigation report from the respective authorities, MOL has attributed the incident to crews’ overconfidence and complacency. According to the company’s internal investigation, two days before the grounding, on July 23, the vessel changed its passage plan to further reduce the distance from the coast from 5 nm to 2 nm, in order to get a Wi-Fi signal. They also used a nautical chart without sufficient scale to confirm the accurate distance from the coast and water depth, MOL said. Reports emerged in mid-August also revealed that the crew were celebrating a crew member’s birthday at the time of the incident, which has not been officially confirmed.
However, media reports early in the year unveiled the scenario of an engine failure, linking it with unsafe fuel supplied onboard. More recently, Geocollect data allegedly revealed that the Wakashio grounded to a sudden halt in the middle of the Indian Ocean on July 17, three days after fueling in Singapore and eight days before it ran aground. Therefore, there was a period of five-and-a-half hours over 60 miles that is unexplained for the vessel, in which satellite data identified an unusual drifting pattern of the vessel indicating a potential engine failure, a scenario denied by MOL.
Environmental consequences
The magnitude of global media attention to the incident is not random at all. Reuters quoted unnamed scientists as saying that the spill was likely the worst environmental incident in the history of Mauritius, with effects possibly lingering for decades. The vessel discharged more than 1,000 tonnes of oil into the island’s pristine lagoon, including its Blue Bay Marine reserve, a biodiversity hotspot in the region.
The marine ecosystem of Mauritius is home to 1,700 species, including about 800 fish species, 17 species of marine mammals and two species of tortoises, according to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity. Scientists believe that the spill can affect wildlife on the islands of Mauritius, where people live mainly from tourism.
Liability and compensation
The international regime on liability and compensation for oil pollution damage caused by persistent oil spills from tankers (IOPC-FUND regime), does not apply in this case, as the oil spill is from a bulk-carrier, not an oil tanker. Mauritius is a State Party to the IOPC FUND regime - which would have provided liability and compensation of up to 203 million SDR (=286 million USD) for this incident, according to UNCTAD. The 2003 Supplementary Fund Protocol provides even higher liability and compensation, up to a maximum of 750 million SDR (around 1.05 billion USD) per incident, but has not been ratified by Mauritius.
Lessons learned
On top of the ecological disaster, no comprehensive information has been made publicly available yet on the cause of the grounding, the possible long-term impact of the oil spill on people’s health and the environment, as well as on why the bow of the vessel was sunk into a whale’s nursing area. In addition, experts say the government has done little to ensure another oil spill does not occur again.
According to a report issued by The Institute of Security Studies (ISS) in December, the grounding of MV Wakashio showed, as a general lesson learned, that the activation of a national oil spill contingency plan cannot stop the far-reaching impacts of marine pollution incidents. While Mauritius was prepared and took swift preventative actions during the MV Wakashio incident, the report reads, the country was ‘insufficiently equipped’ to handle the unprecedented environmental catastrophe that followed. As such, National Oil Spill Contingency Plans must be revised regularly and must provide for all eventualities.
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Wakashio master: ‘I was under the influence of alcohol’
February 19, 2021
Further bombshells have been unearthed in the ongoing court proceedings looking into the Wakashio grounding off Mauritius.
Senior personnel including the chief engineer and the master of the infamous newcastlemax have been answering questions at a court in Mauritius this week.
Sri Lankan chief officer Hitinamillage Tilakaratna Subodha told the court last week that the master had diverted the ship’s course to get closer to the Mauritian coastline in search of a wifi internet connection, something he did regularly around the world.
For his part, Sunil Kumar Nandeshwa, the ship’s Indian captain, has tried to shift the blame onto his first officer, while admitting he had been drinking.
“I was under the influence of alcohol and [Subodha] was in command of the ship,” Nandeshwa told the court, explaining that there had been a birthday party for a crewmember onboard on the day of the ship’s grounding last July.
Former judge Abdurrafeek Hamuth, who is chairing the Court of Investigation into the accident, told the captain: “You shouldn’t have consumed so much alcohol.
There was negligence across the board and from all levels. You were also negligent.”
Earlier this week Nandeshwa had also admitted that no one had been on lookout at the time the ship grounded.
Mitsui OSK Lines (MOL) was the charterer of the Wakashio, owned by Nagashiki Shipping.
En route to Brazil from Asia, the ship diverted from its course, running aground on pristine coral reefs just off southern Mauritius on July 25.
The bulk carrier would go on to spill around 1,000 tonnes of bunker fuel. The Wakashio then split in two.
In a release from December last year announcing measures to prevent another reoccurrence of a Wakashio style disaster, MOL gave the reason the ship had changed its passage plan from leaving a 22 nautical mile gap between it and the island of Mauritius to just two nautical miles. The reason cited, according to the release, was “to enter an area within the communication range of mobile phones”. Moreover, MOL revealed the crew were using a nautical chart without sufficient scale to confirm the accurate distance from the coast and water depth. In addition, MOL said a crewmember neglected appropriate watch-keeping, both visually and by radar.
A Chinese salvage team is this week attempting to remove the stern of the ship from the reef it has been stuck on for the last seven months.
The front three quarters of the giant bulk carrier were towed 30 km offshore and scuttled last year.
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In September last year, Mauritius demanded Japan pay $34m in reparations for the accident, widely believed to be the single worst ecological disaster to hit the Indian Ocean island.