California Oil Spill: Anchored German Ship Made "Unusual Movements"

dannno

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Ship anchored near oil pipeline made unusual movements

https://apnews.com/article/oil-spil...ornia-oceans-982868469d2b8b41933a3043a20ea431




HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. (AP) — A massive cargo ship made a series of unusual movements while anchored in the closest spot to a Southern California oil pipeline that ruptured and sent crude washing up on beaches, according to data collected by a marine navigation service.

The Coast Guard is investigating whether a ship anchor might have snagged and bent the pipeline owned by Amplify Energy, a Houston-based company that operates three offshore oil platforms south of Los Angeles.


The Associated Press reviewed more than two weeks of data from MarineTraffic, a navigation service that tracks radio signals from transponders that broadcast the locations of ships and large boats every few minutes.


That data shows the Rotterdam Express, a German-flagged ship nearly 1,000 feet (305 meters) long, was assigned to anchorage SF-3, the closest to where the pipeline ruptured off Huntington Beach. The ship made three unusual movements over two days that appear to put it over the pipeline.


In a statement to AP, Hapag-Lloyd, the shipping company that operates the Rotterdam Express, denied any role in the spill.


A U.S. official told the AP on Wednesday that the Rotterdam Express has become a focus of the spill investigation. The official cautioned the ship is only one lead being pursued in the investigation, which is in the early stages.


The investigators are seeking to collect tracking and navigational information from the vessel that could help them identify its exact movements, the official said. They are also seeking preliminary interviews with at least some crew members.


The official could not discuss the investigation publicly and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity.


Petty Officer Steve Strohmaier, a Coast Guard spokesperson, declined to comment on the Rotterdam Express but said the agency is analyzing electric charting systems from its vessel traffic service to see what ships were anchored or moving over the spill area.


The MarineTraffic data shows the Rotterdam Express arrived outside the Port of Long Beach early on Sept. 22 and dropped anchor about 2,000 feet (610 meters) from the pipeline.


The following day, at about 5 p.m., the data for the ship’s locator beacon indicated that while anchored it suddenly moved thousands of feet to the southeast, a track that would have taken it over the pipeline lying on the seafloor about 100 feet (30 meters) below. The ship appears to have then engaged its engines to return to its anchorage about 10 minutes later.


The ship then moved again around midnight and a third time shortly before 8 a.m. on Sept. 23, each time moving back to its assigned anchorage, according to its online location data. The Rotterdam Express remained at spot SF-3 until Sunday, when it moved into the port to unload.


The first report of oil in the water near the pipeline were made Friday evening. Amplify said the pipeline was shut down early Saturday morning but has not said how long it believes oil flowed from it.

cont..

https://apnews.com/article/oil-spil...ornia-oceans-982868469d2b8b41933a3043a20ea431
 
The following day, at about 5 p.m., the data for the ship’s locator beacon indicated that while anchored it suddenly moved thousands of feet to the southeast

So either this ship literally carries miles of heavy chain around, or the Associated Press no longer employs anyone smart enough to define the word "anchored".
 
In a statement to AP, Hapag-Lloyd, the shipping company that operates the Rotterdam Express, denied any role in the spill.

The cargo vessel Rotterdam Express is no longer under investigation over its possible involvement in the breach of a pipeline that caused one of California’s worst offshore oil spills in decades, ship owner Hapag-Lloyd AG said.

The ship has been released and is “on her way to Mexico,” Nils Haupt, spokesperson for Hapag-Lloyd, said. “We are no longer under investigation.”

Hapag-Lloyd earlier Thursday said the Coast Guard boarded the vessel Wednesday, interviewed the crew and examined the navigation systems, adding that the Rotterdam Express didn’t pass over the pipeline at the time of the incident and dropped anchor exactly as requested by San Pedro Traffic.

The Coast Guard didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...ss-no-longer-under-oil-spill-probe-owner-says
 
Federal officials have largely been silent about the ongoing investigation or any ships that may be of interest. But Skytruth, a nonprofit organization that uses satellite technology to track environmental issues, found another ship that had passed over the pipeline Friday morning, hours before the spill was detected. That ship, the Zim Sao Paolo, did not drop anchor near the pipeline but may also be a vessel of interest to investigators because it crossed the pipeline near the break, and also seemed to make an erratic movement.

The owners of the ship, Danaos Corp., based in Greece, did not immediately return a request for comment.

Why was the Rotterdam Express being examined?

The container ship was anchored in the area of the pipeline before the spill was discovered, according to satellite data. It was in the closest anchorage spot to the pipeline.

Investigators continue to zero in on a ship anchor as a possible cause. The shipping channels off Los Angeles and Orange counties have been jammed for months because of gridlock at the ports, forcing more ships to lay down anchors near pipes that move oil from offshore platforms onto land.

Where was the Rotterdam?

John Amos, president of Skytruth, said his firm has been analyzing data of ship movements Friday night, when the spill was detected.

Skytruth concluded that the Rotterdam Express was never closer than 1,500 feet to the line, according to satellite data. Instead, the ship kept to a semicircular pattern that would be expected of an anchored ship moved by wind and current. That distance, Amos said, makes it unlikely that its anchor could be the culprit.

He added that the actual location of the pipeline could differ from what is shown in federal mapping data. Amos said the 40-year-old line could have shifted over time, moved either by natural events or other anchor strikes that didn’t cause leaks, with the change going unnoted in official sources.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/travel/ne...ss-the-ship-probed-in-oc-oil-spill/ar-AAPf54Y
 
How about we get rid of all the Fatwahs that have driven many out of trucking and off the docks, so that ships don't have to be stacked up like 45's on a kids record player?

Or better yet, get rid of all the Fatwahs on American manufacturing that would have more container ships outbound than inbound.
 
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