Sunken Canadian Ship Polluting Alaskan Coast

February 25, 2010

According to a Feb. 24 report from The Gazette, a sunken Canadian steamship that offered luxury cruises for decades along the British Columbia coast, then served a crucial role during the Second World War transporting troops, supplies and Jewish refugees, is now polluting the waters of a major Pacific Ocean inlet. The Princess Kathleen, a Canadian Pacific cruise ship sank in a storm off southeast Alaska nearly 60 years ago and has been identified as the source of a persistent oil slick in waters north of Juneau after U.S. Coast Guard officials dived to the wreck site last week.

(Source: The Gazette)

Logistics News

Port of Virginia Advances Capacity with Addition of ULCV Berth

Port of Virginia Advances Capacity with Addition of ULCV Berth

American Great Lakes Ports Launch Study to Expand Cargo Shipments

American Great Lakes Ports Launch Study to Expand Cargo Shipments

US Approves License for Texas Deepwater Oil Export Port

US Approves License for Texas Deepwater Oil Export Port

Zelim Appoints Mike Collier as Sales Director

Zelim Appoints Mike Collier as Sales Director

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Nigeria charges nine people with the 2025 massacre which killed 150
Analysts say that the decline in copper from its record high is due to a weakening demand and rising stocks.
Saudi Aramco & Sonatrach increase LPG Prices for February by 1-5%