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Cargo ship carrying new vehicles to Mexico sinks in the North Pacific weeks after catching fire

Cargo ship carrying new vehicles to Mexico sinks in the North Pacific weeks after catching fire

Arab News2 days ago

'There is no visible pollution,' said Petty Officer Cameron Snell, an Alaska-based US Coast Guard spokesperson 'Right now we also have vessels on scene to respond to any pollution'ANCHORAGE, Alaska: A cargo ship that had been delivering new vehicles to Mexico sank in the North Pacific Ocean, weeks after crew members abandoned ship when they couldn't extinguish an onboard fire that left the carrier dead in the water.The Morning Midas sank Monday in international water off Alaska's Aleutian Islands chain, the ship's management company, London-based Zodiac Maritime, said in a statement.'There is no visible pollution,' said Petty Officer Cameron Snell, an Alaska-based US Coast Guard spokesperson. 'Right now we also have vessels on scene to respond to any pollution.'Fire damage compounded by bad weather and water seepage caused the carrier to sink in waters about 16,404 feet (5,000 meters) deep and about 415 miles (770 kilometers) from land, the statement said.The ship was loaded with about 3,000 new vehicles intended for a major Pacific port in Mexico. It was not immediately clear if any of the cars were removed before it sank, and Zodiac Maritime did not immediately respond to messages Tuesday.A savage crew arrived days after the fire disabled the vehicle.Two salvage tugs containing pollution control equipment will remain on scene to monitor for any signs of pollution or debris, the company said. The crew members of those two ships were not injured when the Morning Midas sank.Zodiac Maritime said it is also sending another specialized pollution response vessel to the location as an added precaution.The Coast Guard said it received a distress alert June 3 about a fire aboard the Morning Midas, which then was roughly 300 miles (490 kilometers) southwest of Adak Island.There were 22 crew members onboard the Morning Midas. All evacuated to a lifeboat and were rescued by a nearby merchant marine vessel. There were no injuries.Among the cars were about 70 fully electric and about 680 hybrid vehicles. A large plume of smoke was initially seen at the ship's stern coming from the deck loaded with electric vehicles, the Coast Guard and Zodiac Maritime said at the time.Adak is about 1,200 miles (1,930 kilometers) west of Anchorage, Alaska's largest city.The 600-foot (183-meter) Morning Midas was built in 2006 and sails under a Liberian flag. The car and truck carrier left Yantai, China, on May 26 en route to Mexico, according to the industry site marinetraffic.com.A Dutch safety board in a recent report called for improving emergency response on North Sea shipping routes after a deadly 2023 fire aboard a freighter that was carrying 3,000 automobiles, including nearly 500 electric vehicles, from Germany to Singapore.One person was killed and others injured in the fire, which burned out of control for a week. That ship was eventually towed to a Netherlands port for salvage.

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Cargo ship carrying new vehicles to Mexico sinks in the North Pacific weeks after catching fire
Cargo ship carrying new vehicles to Mexico sinks in the North Pacific weeks after catching fire

Arab News

time2 days ago

  • Arab News

Cargo ship carrying new vehicles to Mexico sinks in the North Pacific weeks after catching fire

'There is no visible pollution,' said Petty Officer Cameron Snell, an Alaska-based US Coast Guard spokesperson 'Right now we also have vessels on scene to respond to any pollution'ANCHORAGE, Alaska: A cargo ship that had been delivering new vehicles to Mexico sank in the North Pacific Ocean, weeks after crew members abandoned ship when they couldn't extinguish an onboard fire that left the carrier dead in the Morning Midas sank Monday in international water off Alaska's Aleutian Islands chain, the ship's management company, London-based Zodiac Maritime, said in a statement.'There is no visible pollution,' said Petty Officer Cameron Snell, an Alaska-based US Coast Guard spokesperson. 'Right now we also have vessels on scene to respond to any pollution.'Fire damage compounded by bad weather and water seepage caused the carrier to sink in waters about 16,404 feet (5,000 meters) deep and about 415 miles (770 kilometers) from land, the statement ship was loaded with about 3,000 new vehicles intended for a major Pacific port in Mexico. It was not immediately clear if any of the cars were removed before it sank, and Zodiac Maritime did not immediately respond to messages Tuesday.A savage crew arrived days after the fire disabled the salvage tugs containing pollution control equipment will remain on scene to monitor for any signs of pollution or debris, the company said. The crew members of those two ships were not injured when the Morning Midas Maritime said it is also sending another specialized pollution response vessel to the location as an added Coast Guard said it received a distress alert June 3 about a fire aboard the Morning Midas, which then was roughly 300 miles (490 kilometers) southwest of Adak were 22 crew members onboard the Morning Midas. All evacuated to a lifeboat and were rescued by a nearby merchant marine vessel. There were no the cars were about 70 fully electric and about 680 hybrid vehicles. A large plume of smoke was initially seen at the ship's stern coming from the deck loaded with electric vehicles, the Coast Guard and Zodiac Maritime said at the is about 1,200 miles (1,930 kilometers) west of Anchorage, Alaska's largest 600-foot (183-meter) Morning Midas was built in 2006 and sails under a Liberian flag. The car and truck carrier left Yantai, China, on May 26 en route to Mexico, according to the industry site Dutch safety board in a recent report called for improving emergency response on North Sea shipping routes after a deadly 2023 fire aboard a freighter that was carrying 3,000 automobiles, including nearly 500 electric vehicles, from Germany to person was killed and others injured in the fire, which burned out of control for a week. That ship was eventually towed to a Netherlands port for salvage.

Singapore-flagged ship carrying toxic oil explodes off Indian coast
Singapore-flagged ship carrying toxic oil explodes off Indian coast

Arab News

time10-06-2025

  • Arab News

Singapore-flagged ship carrying toxic oil explodes off Indian coast

NEW DELHI: India's Coast Guard and Navy were struggling on Tuesday to extinguish a fire on a Singapore-flagged cargo ship that exploded in the Arabian Sea, triggering an alarm over its load of 100 tonnes of bunker oil. The MV Wan Hai 503, en route to Mumbai from Sri Lanka, reported an internal container explosion on Monday, which triggered a major fire on board as the vessel approached the coast of the southern state of Kerala. The Indian Coast Guard said the situation was 'critical' as its ships engaged in an overnight operation to douse the flames and rescue 22 members of the vessel's crew. Four crew remain missing. Two of them are from Thailand, one from Indonesia and one from Myanmar, according to Singapore's Maritime and Port Authority, which sent a team to assist the Indian rescuers. Containers falling from the ship were reported drifting between Kerala's Kozhikode and Kochi, triggering an alert by the Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services over a potential spill of what it identified as 100 tonnes of bunker oil. Bunker oil is a thick, heavy and viscous fuel used to power large ships, especially cargo vessels and tankers. It is one of the dirtiest and most polluting fuels. It contains sulfur, heavy metals and carcinogens. If spilled, it is difficult to clean up and may persist for months or years in the marine environment, suffocating coral reefs and killing fish and seabirds. 'Caution is advised about a few containers beaching between Kozhikode and Kochi,' the INCOIS said in a notification, adding that there was an 'estimated 70-80 percent probability' that the containers that went overboard from the MV Wan Hai 503 might drift south-southeastwards from the accident location for the next three days. The incident took place just two weeks after a Liberian-flagged vessel carrying hazardous cargo sank off Kerala's coast. The vessel went down with cargo containing calcium carbide and more than 84 metric tonnes of diesel, and 367 metric tonnes of furnace oil. Diesel and furnace oil are both classified as marine pollutants that are toxic to marine life and can contaminate coastal ecosystems.

At least five injured as fire engulfs multiple factories in Pakistan's Karachi
At least five injured as fire engulfs multiple factories in Pakistan's Karachi

Arab News

time09-06-2025

  • Arab News

At least five injured as fire engulfs multiple factories in Pakistan's Karachi

KARACHI: At least five persons were injured after a fire engulfed multiple factories in the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi, Rescue 1122 officials said on Sunday, with efforts underway to douse the blaze. The fire affected four factories, including YG Textile and MF Roomi Textile, at the Landhi Export Processing Zone, with 11 fire brigade trucks and one snorkel taking part in the firefighting operation. The operation was facing difficulties due to the intensity of smoke and shortage of water in the city of roughly 20 million people, according to rescue officials. 'Five people were injured after part of an affected building collapsed,' Rescue 1122 spokesperson Hasaan Khan told Arab News. 'The injured were shifted to the hospital.' The Rescue 1122 team is making efforts to control the blaze by utilizing all possible resources, Khan added. Karachi, Pakistan's largest city and commercial capital, is home to hundreds of thousands of industrial units and some of the tallest buildings in the South Asian country. The megapolis, known for its fragile firefighting system and poor safety controls, witnesses hundreds of fire incidents annually. In Nov. last year, a blaze at a shopping mall killed around a dozen people and injured several others. In April 2023, four firefighters died and nearly a dozen others were injured after a blaze erupted at a garment factory, while 10 people were killed in a massive fire at a chemical factory in the city in August 2021. In the deadliest such incident, 260 people were killed in 2012 after being trapped inside a garment factory when a fire broke out.

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