Incidenten op/aan het water

Auteur Topic: Incidenten op/aan het water  (gelezen 270339 keer)

0 gebruikers (en 7 gasten bekijken dit topic.

Thor

  • Senior gebruiker
  • ****
  • Berichten: 7,221
  • Wat de eb neemt brengt de vloed terug.
Reactie #400 Gepost op: 19 juni 2013, 15:11:17

MOL Comfort an “Incident of Great Concern” – IACS Chairman
.

By Rob Almeida On June 19, 2013
 ..


tom boardley iacs lloyd's register“We can’t prejudge, and we’re not directly involved,”commented Tom Boardley, Marine Director at Lloyd’s Register and Chairman of the International Association of Classification Societies (IACS) today on the catastrophic break up of the containership MOL Comfort.

“This incident of great concern and we want to know the cause of this structural failure. Fortunately, no crew were lost. The causation will lie either in design, construction or operational factors – or  a combination of these. If, as now looks possible, the hull sections can be recovered safely, it will help those investigating to rapidly understand the reasons behind this failure.”

Since news of this disaster broke, seagoing professionals in the maritime industry have been largely debating the procedures in place when loading containers on board vessels.

One of the most critically important factors that a ship captain must know before his ship leaves the harbor is the vessel’s stability characteristics.  Whether the vessel is a containership, tanker, bulk carrier, project cargo vessel, it’s absolutely paramount that the cargo is stored in a such a way that the ship has adequate righting moment.

Not only that, but the cargo must be stored in a way that extreme shear stresses aren’t put on the vessel.

Although it’s very difficult to notice on board (if not impossible), a 1000-foot long ship made of steel flexes significantly from bow to stern depending on the sea conditions and the the cargo loading of the vessel.   Even sitting at the dock it will bend and flex as cargo is loaded on board.  Ships have literally cracked in half at the dock while loading cargo unevenly.

Loading tankers is relatively quite easy as the product densities  and volumes are known, however container weights are obviously non-standard.  Loading them properly takes a bit more calculation and attention to detail and could be a very important factor in the break up of the MOL Comfort.

Based on comments from the gCaptain audience however, a significant amount of doubt appears to hang over the checks and balances in place to ensure boxes are loaded correctly, and their associated weights are measured accurately.

This is only an observation however.  Forensic analysis of the incident will reveal the facts of the matter.

 The IACS Council will be meeting next week to discuss this and other important matters facing the maritime industry.

Read the latest update on the MOL Comfort Incident HERE

http://gcaptain.com/comfort-incident-great-concern/


T4tinus

  • BHVer
  • Forum gebruiker
  • ***
  • Berichten: 348
  • Met en zonder
Reactie #401 Gepost op: 19 juni 2013, 17:00:36
Citaat van: 112WS18 link=msg=1174745 date=1371510458
Dat ziet er spectaculair uit. Hoe wordt dit fenomeen genoemd?
Shelf-cloud met rolwolk.


Thor

  • Senior gebruiker
  • ****
  • Berichten: 7,221
  • Wat de eb neemt brengt de vloed terug.
Reactie #402 Gepost op: 19 juni 2013, 17:55:59
Citaat van: Thor link=msg=1174741 date=1371510170
SPOTD: Crocodile Encounters Ominous Front Offshore Long Island
.

On June 17, 2013 By Rob Almeida .
This photo was taken from the sailing yacht “Crocodile”, a Beneteau First 40.7 while transiting offshore the coast of Long Island and New Jersey during a recent delivery from Newport, [...]

https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.605652312799181.1073741830.217315141632902&type=3

Shelfcloud - rolwolk

5 juni 2011 shelfcloud en rolwolk in 1 bui

Onweer 5 juni 2011 shelfcloud met rotatie


Thor

  • Senior gebruiker
  • ****
  • Berichten: 7,221
  • Wat de eb neemt brengt de vloed terug.
Reactie #403 Gepost op: 20 juni 2013, 13:24:14
Nieuwe scheepvaartroutes Noordzee
van kracht per 1 augustus 2013
Gehele routestructuur verandert ingrijpend


Met ingang van 1 augustus 2013 00.00 UTC (02.00 uur lokale tijd)
verandert de gehele routestructuur in het Nederlandse deel van
de Noordzee ingrijpend. In het aanloopgebied naar IJmuiden
komt, net zoals bij Rotterdam al het geval is, een verkeersscheidingsstelsel
(VSS). Er worden onder andere nieuwe
ankergebieden ingesteld en een aantal bestaande ankergebieden
veranderd. En voormalige munitiestortplaatsen worden
‘areas to be avoided’.
Doel van de aanpassing
De Noordzee is een van de drukst bevaren zeeën ter wereld.
Een aanpassing van de routes is nodig om de veiligheid van het
scheepvaartverkeer te waarborgen, de bereikbaarheid van de
mainports te verbeteren en de ruimte op de Noordzee efficiënter te
gebruiken.
Nieuwe routes van kracht
De nieuwe vaarroutes gelden vanaf 1 augustus 2013 00.00 UTC
(02.00 uur lokale tijd), tot die tijd blijven de oude routes van kracht.
De nieuwe zeekaarten en ENC’s worden half juni gepubliceerd en
Dit is een uitgave van Rijkswaterstaat in samenwerking met: Dienst der
Hydrografie, de Kustwacht, Havenbedrijf Rotterdam en Haven Amsterdam.
februari 2013 | nz1212vh2222
zijn via de gebruikelijke kanalen te koop. Zorg ervoor dat u tijdig
nieuwe zeekaarten aan boord heeft.
Let op!
Op 30 en 31 juli en op 1 augustus vindt de aanpassing in de vaarwegmarkering
op zee plaats. Voorafgaand en tijdens het verplaatsen van
de vaarwegmarkering wordt het scheepvaartverkeer geïnformeerd
door Berichten aan Zeevarenden (BaZ) en navigatieberichten van de
Kustwacht.
Meer informatie
Kijk voor meer informatie over de aanpassing van routes op:
www.rijkswaterstaat.nl/nieuwescheepvaartroutes.
De Berichten aan Zeevarenden (BaZ) en verkoopadressen van
zeekaarten kunt u vinden op www.hydro.nl en op de website van
United Kingdom Hydrographic Office (UKHO) www.ukho.gov.uk.

www.rijkswaterstaat.nl/nieuwescheepvaartroutes.


Thor

  • Senior gebruiker
  • ****
  • Berichten: 7,221
  • Wat de eb neemt brengt de vloed terug.
Reactie #404 Gepost op: 20 juni 2013, 20:26:46
 


 



 
 


MV Asian Express – Dramatic Rescue Caught on Tape



Earlier in June the Indian Coast Guard rescued 22 crew members the sinking Asian Express off the west coast of India and, as it turns out, the rescue was all caught on tape. India’s Times Now has this dramatic report on the dramatic rescue. Check it out:



gCaptain reported June 12 that the M/V Asian Express, a Maldives-flagged general cargo ship, had suffered an engine failure and was adrift for two days in severe weather about 200 miles west of Kochi in the Arabian Sea.

The Indian Coast Guard vessel, ICGS Varuna, responded and upon reaching the ship discovered it had a three to four meter vertical gash in the hull below the waterline and was taking on water. All 22 crew were forced to abandoned ship, but were recovered in a daring operation by the ICGS Varuna as the Asian Express sank in the background.

The ship was enroute from Pakistan to Male with a cargo of cement and sand. The 22 crew consisted of 18 Maldivians and 4 Indians.

http://gcaptain.com/asian-express-daring-rescue-caught-on-tape/


Thor

  • Senior gebruiker
  • ****
  • Berichten: 7,221
  • Wat de eb neemt brengt de vloed terug.
Reactie #405 Gepost op: 21 juni 2013, 13:16:40
Citaat van: Thor link=msg=1175240 date=1371647477
MOL Comfort an “Incident of Great Concern” – IACS Chairman
.

By Rob Almeida On June 19, 2013
 ..


tom boardley iacs lloyd's register“We can’t prejudge, and we’re not directly involved,”commented Tom Boardley, Marine Director at Lloyd’s Register and Chairman of the International Association of Classification Societies (IACS) today on the catastrophic break up of the containership MOL Comfort.

“This incident of great concern and we want to know the cause of this structural failure. Fortunately, no crew were lost. The causation will lie either in design, construction or operational factors – or  a combination of these. If, as now looks possible, the hull sections can be recovered safely, it will help those investigating to rapidly understand the reasons behind this failure.”

Since news of this disaster broke, seagoing professionals in the maritime industry have been largely debating the procedures in place when loading containers on board vessels.

One of the most critically important factors that a ship captain must know before his ship leaves the harbor is the vessel’s stability characteristics.  Whether the vessel is a containership, tanker, bulk carrier, project cargo vessel, it’s absolutely paramount that the cargo is stored in a such a way that the ship has adequate righting moment.

Not only that, but the cargo must be stored in a way that extreme shear stresses aren’t put on the vessel.

Although it’s very difficult to notice on board (if not impossible), a 1000-foot long ship made of steel flexes significantly from bow to stern depending on the sea conditions and the the cargo loading of the vessel.   Even sitting at the dock it will bend and flex as cargo is loaded on board.  Ships have literally cracked in half at the dock while loading cargo unevenly.

Loading tankers is relatively quite easy as the product densities  and volumes are known, however container weights are obviously non-standard.  Loading them properly takes a bit more calculation and attention to detail and could be a very important factor in the break up of the MOL Comfort.

Based on comments from the gCaptain audience however, a significant amount of doubt appears to hang over the checks and balances in place to ensure boxes are loaded correctly, and their associated weights are measured accurately.

This is only an observation however.  Forensic analysis of the incident will reveal the facts of the matter.

 The IACS Council will be meeting next week to discuss this and other important matters facing the maritime industry.

Read the latest update on the MOL Comfort Incident HERE

http://gcaptain.com/comfort-incident-great-concern/




 



 






 


MOL Comfort – Is Container Weight the Issue? [OP/ED]
.

By Editorial On June 20, 2013

This photo of the MOL Comfort shows considerable hogging.  


By Michael Grey

How on earth does a 5 year old 90,000 ton containership, built by one of Japan’s finest shipyards and operated by a tip-top liner company, come to be floating in two bits 19 miles apart?

Weather?

Welding?

Perhaps one of those 100 year waves the Met. Offices are warning us about are rather more frequent?

The smart money must surely be on the stresses induced by under-declared container weights, which shippers routinely refuse to take with any seriousness whatsoever.

Always supposing that there is a good run through the IMO, it has been suggested that it could be another three or four years before SOLAS Regulation VI/2, which provides for the “verification” of container weights, comes into effect. As the distinguished delegates undertake their deliberations on this matter, a huge picture of the after part of the MOL Comfort sitting forlornly in the Arabian Gulf might usefully be displayed on the Council Chamber screens to help focus their minds.

It is now more than six years since the emergency in the English Channel when the MSC Napoli nearly sank through an ingress of water.

It is worth underlining the views of the UK Marine Accident Investigation Branch, which painstakingly required all the boxes retrieved from the wreck to be weighed, and note its suggestion that overweight boxes contributed to the loss of that ship.

Wheels often grind slowly in marine safety mills, but there have surely been enough warnings about excessive container weights to wake everyone up. Feeders have been regularly rolling over, fortunately in shallow water or against the quay. This clearly expensive incident which has put 25 lives and more than 4000 containers at risk ought to clarify the issues.

But we shouldn’t bet on it.

Shippers’ organisations, which have been defending their flawed position on container weights for forty years or more will still be arguing about the responsibilities for verification until the bitter end. If the salvors manage to save this ship, let us hope that every one of those boxes retrieved is weighed, and compared with the manifested declaration.

Michael Grey is the former Editor of Lloyd’s List and Fairplay, currently the London Correspondent of BIMCO and holder of a British FG Master’s Certificate. He writes for a wide range of maritime titles and lectures at the World Maritime University, Greenwich Maritime Institute and General Stevedoring Council.

Article originally posted on the Clay Maitland blog, republished with permission.


http://gcaptain.com/comfort-container-weight-issue/


Thor

  • Senior gebruiker
  • ****
  • Berichten: 7,221
  • Wat de eb neemt brengt de vloed terug.
Reactie #406 Gepost op: 21 juni 2013, 20:51:20

Indonesian Forest Fires Set Singapore Smog Record, Raise Concerns Over Safe Navigation
.

By Reuters On June 21, 2013

A vessel travels on the haze blanketed sea along East Coast Park as the pollutant standards index (PSI) hits above 300 in Singapore June 21, 2013. REUTERS/Tim Chong

reuters logoBy Kanupriya Kapoor and Michael Taylor

JAKARTA, June 21 (Reuters) – Indonesia deployed military planes on Friday to fight forest fires that blanketed neighbouring Singapore in record levels of hazardous smog for a third day in one of Southeast Asia’s worst air-pollution crises.

As Singaporeans donned face masks and pulled children from playgrounds and Malaysia closed schools in the south, the deliberately-lit fires grew bigger in some areas. Whipped up by winds, the blazes added to fears over health problems and diplomatic tension in Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia.

“The winds are picking up and the weather isn’t very good at the moment, so the fires in some places are getting bigger,” said Gunawan, a firefighter who like many Indonesians goes by one name. “We are working as hard as possible to control the fires…but we’re facing difficult conditions.”

Indonesia blamed eight companies, including Jakarta-based PT Sinar Mas Agro Resources and Technology (SMART) and Asia Pacific Resources International (APRIL), for the fires. The government, which said it would take action against any company responsible for the disaster, is expected to name the rest of the firms on Saturday.

“The majority of hotspots in Riau (province) are inside APRIL and Sinar Mas concessions,” senior presidential aide Kuntoro Mangkusubroto told Reuters.

An APRIL statement said the company and third-party suppliers had a “strict no-burn policy” for all concessions in Indonesia.

An analysis of satellite maps and government data by Reuters and the think tank World Resources Institute also revealed spot fires on land licensed to Singapore-listed First Resources Ltd and Indonesia’s Provident Agro.

The analysis did not reveal the cause of the fires or who was at fault.

A spokeswoman for Golden Agri Resources, SMART’s Singapore-listed parent, said the company knew of no hotspots on its concessions.

Illegal burning on Indonesia’s Sumatra island typically takes place in the June to September dry season to clear space for palm oil plantations. This year’s fires are unusually widespread and the haze is the worst in Singapore’s history.

Singapore’s government has warned it could last weeks.

Indonesia has earmarked around 200 billion rupiah ($20 million) to handle the disaster. Seven military aircraft were deployed for water bombings and rain seeding.

“HAZARDOUS”

Hospitals in Dumai and Bengkalis in Indonesia’s Riau province recorded increases in cases of asthma, lung, eye and skin problems, health official Arifin Zainal said.

The Dumai airport remained closed for a third day.

In Singapore, the number of residents wearing face masks rose markedly as the pollution standards index (PSI) climbed to a new record of 401 at midday, a level which health authorities consider potentially life-threatening for the elderly. The PSI moderated later to an “unhealthy” 142 by mid-evening.

“Basically, what a ‘hazardous’ PSI level means is that the pollution will cause damage to the lining of the breathing tube,” said Dr Kenneth Chan, consultant respiratory physician at Singapore’s Gleneagles Medical Centre. “If the lining of the breathing tube is damaged, it will make the patient more vulnerable to various infections.”

In Malaysia, southern Johor state was the worst affected, with pollution readings remaining in the “hazardous” category.

COSTLY FIRE

Air pollution has long been a serious problem in many Asian cities such as New Delhi, Beijing and Hong Kong but it is only an issue in Singapore when the smoke blows in from Sumatra.

According to one method of measuring pollution, the one authorities use in China’s capital, Singapore’s air was much worse than Beijing’s on Friday, according to state agency data.

The cost of the current haze for Singapore could be hundreds of millions of dollars, brokerage CLSA said in a report.

It said that in 2006, when the pollution index reached 150, it was estimated the haze cost $50 million and in 1997 it was $300 million. CLSA said the 1997 and 2006 figures seemed low when considering the direct and indirect cost of prolonged haze.

Workers in Singapore could still be seen toiling at some construction sites despite the elevated levels. TheSingapore government has so far only issued only broad guidelines about employers having to ensure the health and safety of workers.

“Even as our government rails against the corporate interests in Sumatra who are willing to sacrifice human health for profits, the Ministry of Manpower still isn’t practicing what they preach by allowing construction companies inSingapore to make their workers slog through the smog,” the Online Citizen, a socio-political website, said in a commentary.

SAFETY OF NAVIGATION

The Singapore Shipping Association on Friday raised concerns over the safe navigation of ships through Straits of Malacca and Singapore due to reduced visibility.

“The Straits of Malacca and Singapore are among the busiest and narrowest shipping lanes in the world,” said Daniel Tan, Executive Director of SSA. “Reduced visibility in such heavy shipping traffic will definitely affect the safe navigation of ships in the Straits. The passage through the Straits is further complicated by the many smaller barter trading ships and also passenger ships in cross-Strait traffic.”

On any given day, over 140 ships, such very large oil tankers, container ships, bulk carriers and cruise liners, ply through the Straits. There are also a countless number of smaller crafts like passenger ferries, tugs and barges making frequent cross-Straits voyages in the littoral states of Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia.

“In the event of any unfortunate accident, human lives and the marine environment will be at risk, especially if it involves a fully laden VLCC,” added Tan. “The oil spillage from the tanker can have serious consequences not only on the marine life in the Straits but also affect the livelihood of fishermen and those who depend on the tourist industry.”


http://gcaptain.com/indonesian-forest-fires-set-singapore-smog-record-raise-converns-over-safe-navigation/


1300001-MR

  • Senior gebruiker
  • ****
  • Berichten: 1,198
Reactie #407 Gepost op: 21 juni 2013, 20:54:12
Noodvuurwerk voor motorstoring

Breskens, 20 juni 2013

De reddingboten van Cadzand en Breskens zijn vanavond uitgevaren voor een visboot met motorproblemen. Na een kleine zoekactie werd de boot gevonden en veilig naar Breskens gesleept.

Drie sportvissers willen na hun dagje vissen terug naar de thuishaven Breskens. De motor van de visboot denkt daar anders over en wil niet starten. Ze concluderen dat hulp inroepen hun enige optie is. Maar hoe?

De visboot is die ochtend vertrokken zonder apparatuur aan boord. Dus geen marifoon, geen navigatie apparatuur en zelfs geen kompas. Het zicht is ter plaatse minder dan één mijl, dus weten ze niet waar ze zijn.

Uit nood steken ze dan maar en flare af, in de hoop dat iemand deze ziet. Door het slechte zicht wordt deze echter door niemand waargenomen.

Daarop besluiten ze 112 te bellen. De centrale in Driebergen schakelt het telefoontje door naar de Kustwacht, die vervolgens de reddingboten van Cadzand en Breskens alarmeert.

Als de reddingboten uitvaren is er niet veel meer bekend dan “Ergens in de monding van de Westerschelde”. Reddingboot Zeemanshoop legt contact met Centrale Vlissingen voor assistentie.

De centrale meldt dat ze een echo op radar hebben, op ongeveer 1 mijl west van de Trawl boei.

Beide reddingboten zetten koers naar deze positie en komen bijna gelijktijdig aan. Het blijkt te gaan om de bewuste boot.

Reddingboot Zeemanshoop zet een opstapper over om de situatie te bekijken. Gelukkig is iedereen aan boord in orde.  We maken een sleepverbinding en nemen de boot op sleeptouw richting Breskens.

Reddingboot Winifred Lucy Verkade-Clark kan retour station. Reddingboot Zeemanshoop arriveert samen met de visboot een uurtje later veilig in Breskens.

Bron: http://www.knrm.nl/waar-wij-zijn/reddingstations/breskens/reddingrapporten/?contentID=6BABB1AC

Tsja, wat moet je hier nog over zeggen  98uiye 98uiye 98uiye


Thor

  • Senior gebruiker
  • ****
  • Berichten: 7,221
  • Wat de eb neemt brengt de vloed terug.
Reactie #408 Gepost op: 22 juni 2013, 10:12:33
REDDINGVEST.

Overboord vallen is een groot gevaar voor opvarenden van beroeps- en recreatieschepen.
Het komt tientallen keren per jaar voor. Soms komen drenkelingen met de schrik vrij,
maar vaak loopt het slecht af.
Verdrinking is een veelvoorkomende doodsoorzaak, terwijl die veelal te vermijden is:
door het dragen van een goed reddingvest. Elke opvarende moet zich bewust zijn van de
risico’s aan boord en de veiligheidsmiddelen.

Download hier de folder

http://www.koninklijkeschuttevaer.nl/ks/index.php?option=com_phocadownload&view=category&download=431:werk-veilig-draag-een-reddingvest&id=19:divers&Itemid=107


Thor

  • Senior gebruiker
  • ****
  • Berichten: 7,221
  • Wat de eb neemt brengt de vloed terug.
Reactie #409 Gepost op: 22 juni 2013, 22:54:03
Ferry Damaged After Striking Quay in Harwich
.

By gCaptain Staff On June 22, 2013
   

Harwich RNLI lifeboat stands by as tugs help the . Image RNLI
Harwich RNLI lifeboat stands by as tugs help the Sirena Seaways. Image RNLI

A passenger ferry in the U.K. sustained damage and was taking on water Saturday after striking a quay while docking at the Harwich International Port in Essex county.

Photo: RNLI via Twitter
Photo: RNLI via Twitter

Thames Coastguard was notified just after noon Saturday with reports that the ferry Sirena Seaways had been damaged after coming into contact with the quay wall. At first the vessel was taking on water, but this was soon stopped and the water level was brought under control.

The Walton Coastguard Rescue Team, the Harwich RNLI lifeboat, the harbour launch boat, the search and rescue helicopter from RAF Wattisham were sent to the scene, along with a number of other nearby vessels and tugs that went to assist.

At 2.45pm the ferry was brought alongside at Harwich International Port and all 489 passengers on board disembarked. No one was injured and there was no reported pollution.

RNLI indicates that strong winds may have played a role in the allision.

“Thames Coastguard assisted Harwich International Port with the co-ordination of this incident,” said Aimee Rampton, Watch Manager at Thames Coastguard. “We had a very successful outcome today, 489 people onboard and no injuries incurred.”

“This is one of the regular ferries that comes into Harwich and as it docked it hit the side of the quay making a hole under the water line,” said Essex County Fire and Rescue Service Station Officer Terry Jewell.

The Sirena Seaways operates from Denmark to Harwich.


http://gcaptain.com/ferry-damaged-after-striking-quay-in-harwich/