Fire-Damaged Tankship Denied Asian Pacific Port of Refuge

MarineLink.com
Wednesday, February 12, 2014

A fire-damaged tankship, 'Maritime Maisie' loaded with hazardous chemicals has become a maritime football in the north Pacific, with Japan and South Korea unwilling to give it refuge even though they risk a wider environmental disaster if it sinks, reports Reuters.

The 44,000 dwt tanker, collided with another ship 9 nautical miles off Busan, South Korea, on December 29, 2013, Ying Jinghua, fleet director of MSI Ship Management, which manages the tanker's day-to-day operation informed Reuters. The accident caused a fire when a cargo tank holding the chemical acrylonitrile ruptured. The ship, owned by Aurora Tankers, part of Singapore's IMC Group, was carrying 29,337 metric tons of acrylonitrile, used to make plastics and synthetic rubber.

The Hong Kong-registered ship has been towed between South Korea and Japan following the collision and evacuation of the crew, amid efforts to persuade either of the countries to provide a place of refuge, where its remaining cargo could be safely offloaded to another ship.

Categories: Casualties Environmental Legal People & Company News Tankers

Related Stories

Smart Port Challenge 2025 Attracts 288 Proposals, Winners Announced

SRI Study Shows a Growing Number of Countries Implementing Cabotage Laws

Maritime Fees Spiral Deepens as US, China Trade Blows

Current News

Smart Port Challenge 2025 Attracts 288 Proposals, Winners Announced

Noatum Maritime, Bapco Upstream Sign Agreement for Marine Services at Bahrain LNG Terminal

Algoma Central Fleet Hits the 100-Vessel Mark, Records Strong Q3

Anglo-Eastern Debuts Methanol Bunkering Simulator, Courses

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News