U.S. Coast Guard Participates in Costa Concordia Investigation

press release
Monday, November 19, 2012

The U.S. Coast Guard, joined by the National Transportation Safety Board, will be part of an Italian-led marine casualty investigation into the January 2012 grounding and partial sinking of the cruise ship Costa Concordia off the coast of Italy.
 

The incident left 32 people dead, including two Americans. Evidence, timeline, analysis, conclusion(s), recommendations and a draft report are to be formalized over the next few months of the investigation. The Coast Guard places the highest priority on the safety of passenger vessels, including those domestic and foreign vessels that embark passengers in the United States and embark U.S. passengers world-wide, ensuring they are in compliance with applicable international and domestic safety standards.


The Coast Guard routinely participates in casualty investigations, even those taking place overseas, and leads efforts at the International Maritime Organization to improve maritime safety, security and environmental protection standards.
Coast Guard and NTSB participation in the Costa Concordia marine casualty investigation is consistent with generally accepted international marine casualty investigation practices and with Coast Guard statutory authority in 46 U.S.C. 6101(g) and 6301.

Categories: Salvage Casualties Coast Guard Maritime Safety Government Update

Related Stories

USTR: New Measures Target Chinese Maritime Sector

US Targets China Oil Storage Terminal in Iran-Related Sanctions

US Fossil Fuel, Farm Groups Rail Against Trump Port Fee Plan

Current News

Greensand’s CO2 Transit Terminal at Port Esbjerg Starts Taking Shape

Wallenius Wilhelmsen Finalizes Acquisition of Armacup

Bulls Joins TVO's Global Business Development Team

DP World, Asian Terminals Inc. Invest $100M to Boost Capacity at Manila South Harbor

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News