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Simushir, fuel-laden Russian cargo ship, adrift off Haida Gwaii

First Nation issues alert about Russian container ship over fears it could hit the coast

CBC News Posted: Oct 17, 2014 10:20 AM PT Last Updated: Oct 17, 2014 6:44 PM PT, Source - CBC Canada

 

A 135-metre cargo ship laden with hundreds of tonnes of bunker and diesel fuel is adrift without power off the west coast of Haida Gwaii, and the Haida Nation fears the vessel will run aground tonight.

 

The Russian bulk carrier vessel Simushir is at the whim of wind and waves about 25 kilometres off Moresby Island's Tasu Sound, according to the Canadian Forces' Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Victoria.

 

  • The Russian-flagged cargo ship Simushir is drifting without power off the west coast of Haida Gwaii with 10 crew members on board.
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The Canadian Coast Guard reported that the ship was incapacitated in gale force winds at around 1:30 a.m. PT Friday. Officials later that afternoon that efforts were underway to get the ship's engine running again, but winds could push the vessel closer to land before that happens.

 

CBC meteorologist Johanna Wagstaffe said storm warnings remain in effect for the area and the wind, which had been gusting from the southwest, will be changing direction.

 

"Over the next few hours, they'll be shifting, coming in straight from the west, meaning pushing against the ship, pushing it towards to east," she said Friday afternoon. "Really, the next 12 hours will be critical with the changing weather conditions."

 

Friday night weather forecast for Haida Gwaii

Winds from the west are expected Friday night in the area of the stranded ship, represented by the orange spot in this precipitation forecast image. (CBC)

 

B.C. Environment Minister Mary Polak said her ministry received news of the situation at around 6 a.m. Friday, and that preparations are being made in the event that the ship runs aground.

 

"The province is also contacting its partners in the B.C. Pacific States Oil Spill Task Force both to notify them of the risk and to ask them to provide mutual aid as needed based on the outcome of efforts to restore power to the vessel,” a statement from her ministry said.

 

Acting Canadian Sub. Lt. Ron MacDougall said the Simushir is carrying "a range of hydrocarbons, mining materials and other related chemicals," which includes 400 tons of bunker oil and 50 tons of diesel.

Ship's captain injured

Ten crew members remain on board, hours after the ship's captain was taken from the ship for medical treatment.

 

The Canadian Coast Guard said a CH-149 Cormorant helicopter from 19 Wing Comox was dispatched to the ship and transported the captain to Sandspit at around 12:30 p.m. PT.

 

The offshore coast guard ship Gordon Reid, which was reported to be en route Friday morning, reached the Simushir late Friday afternoon, according to a statement from the Council of the Haida Nation.

 

The council reports that the coast guard vessel is having difficulty getting a line to the Simushir.

 

"Earlier this afternoon the vessel was drifting away from shore but as of 5 p.m. tonight, it is now headed back towards the coast. Heavy weather from the west is expected later tonight, which will again push the ship toward the shore," the statement said.

 

A U.S. tugboat company, Foss Marine Ltd., dispatched the tug Barbara Foss from Prince Rupert early Friday with plans to tow the stricken vessel back to Prince Rupert. The Council of the Haida Nation said the tug and another coast guard vessel, the Sir Wilfrid Laurier, are expected to arrive at the Simushir at 1 a.m. PT Saturday.

 

Various other coast guard vessels, including the CCGS Bartlett, the  CCGS  Arrow Post and the CCGS W.E. Ricker, are in various stages of being readied and deployed, a statement from the Canadian Coast Guard said.

 

The Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre has asked the M/V North Star, which was in the area earlier in the day, to remain on the scene.

 

The coast guard said it is making preparations to mount an incident command post, in the event that a spill response is required.

 

The U.S. Coast Guard also dispatched a helicopter to Sandspit, on the main island of Haida Gwaii. Haida Gwaii used to be known as the Queen Charlotte Islands.

Haida Nation alarmed

The Council of the Haida Nation has issued an emergency alert in case the ship makes landfall.

'We're scared. We're scared about what this could mean. It's the worst scenario possible.- Council of the Haida Nation president Peter Lantin

Rescue officials say the ship is drifting parallel to the coast so there is no imminent threat of it running aground, but the Haida Nation is calling the situation dire, saying the ship could hit the B.C. coast before help arrives.

 

CHN President [kil tlaast’gaa] Peter Lantin said it's their worst fear coming true and casts doubt on the Northern Gateway pipeline project's promises of world class oil tanker safety.

 

"There's nothing world class about it. The fact that 20 hours is the earliest estimated time of arrival for anybody just reinforces what we have been saying all along," Lantin said in a Skype interview from Haida Gwaii.

 

"The systems in place are not adequate, and it's a joke. It's a joke to think they could ramp up the amount of tankers through our territory and convince us that there's world class systems in place to respond. We're scared. We're scared about what this could mean. It's the worst scenario possible." 

 

The Simushir was en route from Everett, Wash., to Russia when it lost power.

 

Hadia Gwaii ship adrift

The container ship Samushir is carrying hundreds of tonnes of bunker oil and is adrift off the B.C. coast near Haida Gwaii. Click for a larger image.

 

(Canadian Press)

 

Source - http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...aida-gwaii-1.2803590

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Coast guard tows disabled Russian ship off B.C. coast (updated)

Members of Haida First Nation relieved vessel carrying fuel stopped from running aground

 

PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. - A Canadian Coast Guard vessel continued to slowly tow a disabled Russian container ship carrying hundreds of tons of fuel away from British Columbia’s pristine northern coast on Saturday. The move significantly lessened the threat of the ship running aground, hitting the rocks and causing a spill.

 

The Canadian Forces’ joint rescue co-ordinationcentre said the Russian carrier Simushir lost power off Haida Gwaii, also known as the Queen Charlotte Islands, as it made its way from Everett in Washington state to Russia. 


 

Acting Sub. Lt. Ron MacDougall said the Coast Guard ship Gordon Reid secured a towline and the two vessels were moving away from the coastline at two knots (3.7 kilometres per hour) in 3 to 4-meter (10 to 12-foot) swells. Officials said the outcome was subject to weather, but the danger has been lessened.

 

MacDougall said the ship, originally nine miles (14.5 kilometres) offshore, is now 23 miles offshore (37 kilometres). He said the Canadian Coast Guard vessel Sir Wilfrid Laurier and U.S. Coast Guard cutter Spar are there to provide assistance but they haven’t yet been needed. The ocean going tug Barbara Foss was also due to arrive later Saturday morning.

 

β€œThe further they get away from the coast and the nearer the larger tug gets the better,” MacDougall said.

 

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper tweeted his thanks for the β€œgreat work” the Gordon Reid ship is doing off the coast.

 

The ship was drifting northwest in stormy seas Friday, away from shore, after losing power late Thursday, officials said.

 

The fear of oil spills is especially acute in British Columbia, where residents remember the Exxon Valdez disaster of 1989. Such worries have fed fierce opposition β€” particularly from environmentalists and Canada’s native tribes β€” to a current proposal to build a pipeline that would carry oil from Canada’s Alberta oil sands to a terminal in Kitimat, British Columbia, on the Pacific Coast for shipment to Asia. Opponents say the proposed pipeline would bring about 220 large oil tankers a year to the province’s coast.

 

The president of the Council of the Haida Nation had warned Friday that a storm coming into the area was expected to push the ship onto the rocky shore, but later President Pete Lantin said their worst fears have subsided.

 

β€œIf the weather picks up it could compromise that, but as of right now there is a little sense of relief that we might have averted catastrophe here,” Lantin said.

 

About 5,000 people live on the island and fish for food nearby, Lantin said.

Roger Girouard, an assistant commissioner with the Canadian Coast Guard, said their top concern was the fuel and diesel oil onboard and the risk that the ship could hit the rocks and break apart.

 

He earlier said if the ship did come apart the rough seas would break up the oil β€œso we would have an ally there. It’s cold weather so we don’t have a lot of migratory species right at the moment.”

He said they have been already moving assets to the region to respond should the break apart and spill.

 

MacDougall said the Simushir, which is about 440 feet (135 metres) long, was carrying β€œa range of hydrocarbons, mining materials and other related chemicals.” That included 400 tons of bunker oil and 50 tons of diesel.

The vessel is not a tanker but rather a container ship. In comparison, the tanker Exxon Valdez, spilled out 35,000 metric tons of oil.

 

A spokesman for Russian shipping firm SASCO, the owners of the vessel, said it is carrying 298 containers of mining equipmentin addition to heavy bunker fuel as well as diesel oil onboard for the voyage.

 

The U.S. Coast Guard had a helicopter on standby in the event that 10 crew members need to be pulled off the ship. Officials said the injured captain was evacuated by helicopter, but they were given no further medical details.

 

The Haida Nation said it had set up an emergency command centre in Old Massett, located on the northern tip of Haida Gwaii, in case the vessel runs aground.

 

The Simushir is registered in Kholmsk, Russia, and owned by SASCO, also known as Sakhalin Shipping Company, according to the company’s website. The SASCO website says the ship was built in the Netherlands in 1998.

 
FM

Simushir, fuel-laden Russian cargo ship, adrift off Haida Gwaii after tow lines part

Canadian Coast Guard vessel tried 3 times to attach lines to the incapacitated ship

CBC News Posted: Oct 18, 2014 8:50 AM PT, Last Updated: Oct 18, 2014 1:18 PM PT, Source - CBC, Canada

 

A photo posted to the Facebook page of Maritime Forces Pacific [MARPAC) Saturday morning, Oct. 18, shows the Canadian Coast Guard ship Gordon Reid towing the incapacitated Russian cargo ship Simushir. By 11:30 a.m. PT, three separate tow lines had parted, officials reported.

A photo posted to the Facebook page of Maritime Forces Pacific (MARPAC) Saturday morning, Oct. 18, shows the Canadian Coast Guard ship Gordon Reid towing the incapacitated Russian cargo ship Simushir. By 11:30 a.m. PT, three separate tow lines had parted, officials reported. (Maritime Forces Pacific/Facebook)

 

A Russian cargo ship carrying hundreds of tons of fuel is once again adrift off the west coast of Haida Gwaii after a Canadian Coast Guard vessel lost three tow lines.

 

A spokesman with the Canadian Forces' Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Victoria told CBC News at 11:30 a.m. PT that the Canadian Coast Guard vessel Gordon Reid had tried three times to attach lines to the incapacitated ship, but that all three lines had snapped.

 

Navy Lt. Cmdr. Desmond James said it wasn't wholly unexpected that the lines to the Simushir, to use nautical terminology, "parted."

 

"What's good is that she's very far off the coast. We've put some really good distance there," he told CBC News.

 

The coast guard is also dealing with waves as high as four metres.

The ship, which was 14.5 kilometres offshore when the Gordon Reid secured the first tow line at 6:30 p.m. Friday night, was reported to be 46 kilometres from land as of 9:30 a.m. Saturday.

 

Two other vessels, the Canadian Coast Guard vessel Sir Wilfrid Laurier and U.S. Coast Guard cutter Spar, are standing by to provide assistance, but aren't properly equipped to secure and tow a large ship, James said.

 

The hope is that the oceangoing tug Barbara Foss, which is still en route, will be able to secure and direct the cargo ship.

 

"That really puts us in a good position to kind of made some decisions on the way ahead," James said.

 

An RCAF Cormorant helicopter, RCAF Buffalo aircraft and U.S. Coast Guard Jayhawk helicopter remain on standby and have been  pre-positioned  in Sandspit, should any of the remaining 10 crew members on the ship need rescuing, he said.

 

The Russian carrier Simushir lost power off Haida Gwaii, also known as the Queen Charlotte Islands, on Friday as it made its way from Everett, Wash., to Russia.

 

Earlier Saturday, James said the operation was "very dynamic," but had been going well. He said the question of where to take the ship would soon have to be answered.

 

"The decisions now, or what they're looking at, is at what point do we want to start making this tow from a westerly direction to a northerly direction, and start to get back toward a plan or an idea that will allow us to plan to bring this vessel toward the shore," he said.

 

"We don't have a location or any of that β€” I know people are asking β€” but really, we want to start making this vessel start making headway northward."

 

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper also tweeted his thanks Saturday morning for the "great work" the Gordon Reid ship was doing off the coast.

 

'Might have averted catastrophe'

Ship Adrift

A Canadian Coast Guard helicopter flies near a Russian container ship, shown in this handout image, carrying hundreds of tonnes of fuel was drifting without power in rough seas off British Columbia's northern coast on Friday. (DND/Maritime Forces Pacific/Canadian Press)

 

The ship was drifting northwest in stormy seas Friday, away from shore, after losing power late Thursday, officials said.

 

The fear of oil spills is especially acute in British Columbia, where residents remember Alaska's 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster. Such worries have fed fierce opposition β€” particularly from environmentalists and First Nations communities β€” to a current proposal to build a pipeline that would carry oil from the Alberta oilsands to a terminal in Kitimat for shipment to Asia. Opponents say the proposed pipeline would bring about 220 large oil tankers a year to the province's coast.

 

The president of the Council of the Haida Nation had warned Friday that a storm coming into the area was expected to push the ship onto the rocky shore of Moresby Island, but later council president Pete Lantin said their worst fears have subsided.

 

"If the weather picks up it could compromise that, but as of right now there is a little sense of relief that we might have averted catastrophe here," Latin said.

 

About 5,000 people live on the island and fish for food nearby, Lantin said.

The Haida Nation said it had set up an emergency command centre in Old Massett, located on the northern tip of Haida Gwaii, in case the vessel runs aground.

Rough seas would break up oil

Roger Girouard, an assistant commissioner with the Canadian Coast Guard, said their top concern was the fuel and diesel oil on board and the risk that the ship could hit the rocks and break apart.

 

Russian ship Simushir adrift off Haida Gwaii

Maritime Forces Pacific (MARPAC) shared these photos Friday afternoon of the Russian bulk carrier vessel that was adrift off Haida Gwaii. The captain was reported to be injured and was taken from the ship by helicopter. (MARPAC/Facebook)

 

He earlier said if the ship did come apart the rough seas would break up the oil "so we would have an ally there. It's cold weather so we don't have a lot of migratory species right at the moment."

 

He said they have been already moving assets to the region to respond should the break apart and spill.

 

Acting Canadian Sub. Lt. Ron MacDougall said the Simushir, which is about 135 metres long, was carrying "a range of hydrocarbons, mining materials and other related chemicals." That included 400 tons of bunker oil and 50 tons of diesel.

 

The vessel is not a tanker but rather a container ship. In comparison, the tanker Exxon Valdez spilled out 35,000 metric tons of oil.

 

A spokesman for Russian shipping firm SASCO, the owners of the vessel, said it is carrying 298 containers of mining equipment in addition to heavy bunker fuel as well as diesel oil.

 

The U.S. Coast Guard had a helicopter on standby in the event that 10 crew members need to be pulled off the ship. Officials said the injured captain was taken from the ship by helicopter, but they were given no further medical details.

The Simushir is registered in Kholmsk, Russia, and owned by SASCO, also known as Sakhalin Shipping Company, according to the company's website. The SASCO website says the ship was built in the Netherlands in 1998.

 

Hadia Gwaii ship adrift

The container ship Samushir is carrying hundreds of tonnes of bunker oil and is adrift off the B.C. coast near Haida Gwaii. Click for a larger image. (Canadian Press)

 

Source - http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...lines-part-1.2804589

FM

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