Containership Ablaze Off Canada's East Coast

January 4, 2019

File photo of the Yantian Express (Photo: Hapag Lloyd)
File photo of the Yantian Express (Photo: Hapag Lloyd)

German shipping line Hapag Lloyd said on Friday that it was trying to extinguish a fire on its Yantian Express container vessel off Canada's east coast but was being hampered by bad weather.

A spokesman for Hapag Lloyd said the fire broke out on Thursday in a container on deck and spread to some other containers on the vessel, but the cause was not yet known.

The 7,519 twenty foot equivalent ship was on its way from Colombo, Sri Lanka to Halifax in Nova Scotia via the Suez Canal, and was currently sailing at a slow speed around 650 nautical miles off the east coast of Canada.

Strong winds meant attempts to extinguish the fire had to be halted on Friday, with the hope of restarting on Saturday, the spokesman said.

A second ship was nearby to support the Yantian Express and a tugboat was on its way to help spray the front end of the vessel, he said.

The crew of eight officers and 15 seafarers remained on board but were safe, the spokesman said.

"We are taking it very seriously," he said. "The next steps hinge on weather conditions."

The German-flagged ship was built in 2002 and is 320 meters long.

The fire follows another shipping incident this week when the Panamanian-flagged MSC ZOE container vessel lost part of its cargo in heavy seas off the Dutch and German coast.


(Reporting by Vera Eckert; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Logistics News

Liebherr USA Appoints New Divisional Director

Liebherr USA Appoints New Divisional Director

Port Houston Surpasses Three Million TEUs

Port Houston Surpasses Three Million TEUs

Trump, Xi Pause Port Fees on Each Other's Vessels

Trump, Xi Pause Port Fees on Each Other's Vessels

US Grants India Sanctions Waiver to run Iranian Port

US Grants India Sanctions Waiver to run Iranian Port

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Data show that Russian pipeline gas exports into Europe increased by 5% m/m during October.
Tanzania opposition claims hundreds of deaths in protests against voting
The UK's Port of Dover delays the new EU border controls for tourist traffic