Monrovia — The merchant ship Torm Alexandra is again afloat in Monrovia Freeport after a lengthy and complicated salvage operation in the Liberian capital. The ship capsized and sunk on July 25, 2001 after local stevedores, who had little experience with large cargoes, mishandled the ship's two cranes they were using to offload containers. The containers slid towards the port side of the vessel, causing it to heel. The ship sank with all its cargo in about half an hour, according to an account from the owner, the Danish company Fabricius Marine. Removal of the wreckage, which has been blocking one of four berths in the main wharf, will add significantly to the Freeport's operational capacity. The salvage operation was carried out by Buchanan Renewables, a Geneva-based company which is building a 35-megawatt power plant to provide electricity to the capital and surrounding area. The Overseas Private Investment Corporation, a U.S. government agency, is providing U.S. $112 million in financing for the project. The plant will be fueled with wood chips from Liberian rubber trees that are beyond their productive life. The sunken cargo disappeared a long time ago. The ship will be demolished and sold for scrap. allafrica.comThanks, Murray, for the photo below from http://www.otal.com/liberia/. Olly
And thanks Don (one of the salvage team) for the photo above. He said the floated ship stinks like a sewer, but fortunately they've not seen any bodies (of drowned looters) amongst the mud yet. The ship will be towed to the Liberian port of Buchanon, where it will be cut up.
1 comment:
Great news, Ol, and thanks. That's why yours is still the only MS blog I still read regularly!
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