INTERCARGO Issues Statement on Loss of Stellar Daisy

April 6, 2017

“After the tragic loss of STELLAR DAISY, a quality and thorough investigation report will be needed quickly.”


INTERCARGO is deeply concerned at the tragic loss of the VLOC vessel STELLAR DAISY reported on 31 March 2017; our thoughts are with the families and loved ones of the seafarers. As long as there is still hope, our wishes are for the missing officers and crew to be found and the loss of life in this sad event to be minimised, as only 2 of them have been rescued so far, and reportedly 22 still missing.


INTERCARGO praises the Search And Rescue (SAR) efforts in response to this unfortunate incident. In its aftermath, the shipping community should be concerned about the non-availability of sufficient SAR capabilities in the vicinity of busy shipping lanes around the world and revisit this issue.


INTERCARGO encourages the Flag State and all stakeholders (e.g. Classification Society and P&I Club) involved in this regretful event to be mobilised swiftly and cooperate fully, in order to submit as quickly as possible to IMO a thorough and quality report investigating its causes. Lessons need to be learnt promptly after maritime casualties.


INTERCARGO stresses the importance of timely submission of the casualty investigation report to IMO, as a means to identify the causes of the incident and enable corrective actions to be taken. To this end, and given its commitment to the safety of crews and ships as its top priority, INTERCARGO engages itself in making full use of such a report outcome in the industry fora where it participates and in its capacity as the International Association of Dry Cargo Shipowners.

Logistics News

igus Wins Award for Mobile Shore Power Outlet System

igus Wins Award for Mobile Shore Power Outlet System

Novorossiisk Reaches Max Export Capacity, Traders Struggle to Reroute Oil

Novorossiisk Reaches Max Export Capacity, Traders Struggle to Reroute Oil

CMA CGM Places First Order for Indian-Built Vessels

CMA CGM Places First Order for Indian-Built Vessels

Trade Group Wants Ban on Export of Scrap Aluminum Cans to China

Trade Group Wants Ban on Export of Scrap Aluminum Cans to China

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Canada's transport safety agency raises alarm over a record number of runway incidents
TNB CEO: Natural gas will overtake coal by 2032 as Malaysia's primary source of energy
Maguire: Seven potentially magnificent US clean-energy stocks