Thursday  September 09  2010
   
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oil spill
THE Hebei Two — Jasprit Chawla and Syam Chetan, the two Indians who were detained in Korea in December 2007 when their tanker ships collided with floating cranes of MNC, Samsung— received the Newsmaker of the Year award at the Lloyd’s List Asia Awards this week.

As their case recedes into history, the will to fight similar cases must be the million dollar concern.

The master and first officer of the Hebei Spirit are presented as cool and gracious a demeanour as any that have sailed the high seas. Both hail from India, and following their homecoming from arrest and detention in South Korea in June, were welcomed as national celebrities and feted in their home towns of Dehradun and Goa.

On Thursday night they were gracious about the support they received, particularly from V. Ships, the Hebei Spirit’s manager, and its chief executive Roberto Giorgi.

The spill that followed became South Korea’s worst environmental disaster. The two officers were finally cleared of destruction of property in a High Court judgment that confirmed a decision by South Korea’s Supreme Court to overturn the conviction and jail sentences imposed by an earlier court decision.

The case held particular prominence because the two had no control over the accident and were generally seen to be held as scapegoats in the public outcry and political dust-up that ensued from the spill.

Capt Chawla offered this trenchant comment on shipping’s handling of criminalization cases. “The problem has been everyone in the industry has been busy looking after their own interests, including shipowners and P&I clubs,” he said. “We need to be united in tackling this problem.”

Mr Giorgi was succinct on the point. He recommended strong guidelines through a draft of international law that can be passed by the International Maritime Organization. The aim would be to establish an international legal standard in such cases and to eliminate unfair detention.

As subsequent cases involving the Full City in Norway and the Tosa in Taiwan remind us, aggressive state action against seafarers is no longer an anomaly. Faster action is needed.

 

 

Source: Lloyd's List

 

Beijing: Chinese authorities continue labour over the damage incurred at the mouth of the Yangtze River following an oil spill on Sunday from Iranian ferry Zoorik, which was caught up in unfavourable weather conditions and pushed on to rocks by strong waves.

Although all 37 people on board were rescued, local media have reported a visible oil spill on the Chinese waters.

Zhoushan City’s maritime bureau has confirmed that four vessels have already been deployed to the erred site with around 30 cleaners onboard. Additional staff are expected to join the clean up in the coming days.

This incident occurred on the same day as another vessel carrying 100 tonnes of hydrochloric acid also sank in the Yangtze River following a collision. Workers are currently in the process of attempting to recover the cargo and avert environmental issues.

 

Source: Seatradeasia

 

San Francisco: Just three days after spilling oil, the owner and manager of the Dubai Star have been charged with a lawsuit.

The 2007 built ship, owned by Emirates Trading Agency of Dubai, spilt up to 3,000 litres of fuel oil while refueling at San Francisco. Now, three fishermen and a seafood company have pushed a $10m lawsuit to court. Also targeted by the seafood grouping is Heidmar, the Connecticut-based operator of the medium-range products tanker pool that the Dubai Star trades in.

"This oil spill was in violation of safe operating procedures which are mandatory for all vessels and fuel suppliers to follow while transferring fuel from lighter ship or shore facility onto a vessel on navigable waters," lawyer Anthony Urie wrote in the civil complaint. The ship is now being inspected.

Source: Maritime Reporter and Engineering News

 

 

Norway has released two Chinese officers detained over the oil spill incident involving the bulker, ‘Full City’.

The 26,800DWT bulker was grounded in heavy seas in July and was freed from the rocks a month later.

The Norwegian appeal court ruled that the ship's Master Zong Aming and ChiefOfficer Qilanng Lu may have their passports returned on payment of a bail of US$178,000 each.

The seafarers will be able to return to China to await further court hearings in Norway next year.

"This is an important and very welcome decision,” said Roberto Giorgi, President of InterManager, an international trade association for the shipmanagement industry.

InterManager, which led calls for the fair treatment of the ‘Hebei Spirit’ officers earlier this year, has worked with the International Transport Workers Federation (ITF) to campaign for the return of the passports, insisting seafarers should not be assumed guilty without a fair trial.

Defence lawyers for the ‘Full City’ officers have argued the two men's alleged negligence did not warrant pre-trial detention and claimed the men have suffered stress while detained in Norway.

 

Source: Baird Maritime

 

 
‘West Atlas’ rig owner, PTTEP Australasia finally managed to cease the oil spill in Timor Sea. The oil spill had been causing tremors for the few months when finally a fire broke out on 1st November, 2009.

PTTEP Australasia stated that no more oil or gas was escaping from the leak; however, the company will continue to pump a mud/brine mixture into the damaged pipeline as a precautionary measure. 

According to Australian Resources and Energy Minister Martin Ferguson “a commission of inquiry and a commissioner would soon be announced. Besides the federal inquiry, the National Offshore Petroleum Authority will also conduct a separate inquiry”

 

 

 

Source: Baird Online

 
Fire broke out at the decks of West Atlas' sister rig, the West Triton and Monatara wellhead platform turning the scenario from bad to worse.

“The fire which has engulfed the Montara wellhead platform and the Seadrill-owned jack-up rig West Atlas, in the Timor Sea, is out of control” admitted PTTEP executive Jose Martins

He also added the fact in today’s press conference that yesterday's attempt to kill the well may have triggered the fire.

PTTEP had already reported earlier that well control experts were taking steps to reduce the intensity of the situation by mixing 4000 barrels of heavy density mud. Taking safety issues into account, it is now possible to kill the fire only by tomorrow morning.

“The best and safest way to stop the fire is to kill the well by pumping heavy mud into the leaking well from the West Triton rig,” Martins, who is the company's chief financial officer, said.

 “The mixture of heavy mud is designed to backflow along the leaking well, stopping the flow of gas and oil at the surface of the H1 well, cutting off the fuel source for the fire at the well head platform. This should kill the well and should stop the fire” he added

Serious investigations have been claimed by the senior officials quoting the incident.

 

 

 

Source: Upstreamonline

 

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