Tuesday, 09 January 2018 14:23

Iranian tanker burns for third day after collision..

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Iranian tanker burns

Iranian tanker burns for third day after collision off China coast

January 08, 2018 - An Iranian-owned oil tanker that collided with a Chinese freighter in the East China Sea on Saturday was still on fire on Tuesday morning, the Chinese government said.

According to Reuters quoting the Chinese Ministry of Transport, efforts to tame the fire and search for the remaining 31 missing crew members of Iranian national have been hampered by poor conditions, with heavy winds, rain and high waves, MNA reported.

The body of a crew member was found on Monday in the water near the tanker, the ministry said. It had been handed over to the civil affairs bureau, the statement added.

The tanker Sanchi, carrying 136,000 tons of condensate bound for Republic of Korea, and run by National Iranian Tanker Co., hit a Chinese freight ship on Saturday night in the East China Sea and burst into flames after spilling oil. There are growing concerns that the tanker may explode and sink, as 13 rescue boats struggle to control the blaze for a third day.

All 21 crew members on the bulk freighter — all Chinese nationals — were rescued.

But China's English-language state broadcaster CGTN later posted a video on Twitter showing the fire seemingly under control as a second vessel sprayed it with water, AFP reported.

Earlier the Chinese Transport Ministry said rescuers trying to locate the crew of 30 Iranians and two Bangladeshis were being beaten back by toxic clouds.

The Panamanian-flagged 274-meter (899-foot) tanker Sanchi is "in danger of exploding or sinking," the ministry said.

Rescuers had recovered one unidentified body as of Monday afternoon, said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang.

"Conditions... are not that favorable for search and rescue work," he said, adding that "we are also investigating how to prevent any secondary disaster."

The body was found three or four miles from the tanker and "cannot be easily identified" even though the victim had a fire safety vest, Alireza Irvash, from Iran's Consulate in Shanghai, told Iranian state broadcaster IRIB.

The accident happened on Saturday evening 160 nautical miles east of the city.

The tanker, operated by Iran's Glory Shipping, was heading to South Korea when it collided with a Hong Kong-flagged cargo ship, the CF Crystal, carrying 64,000 tonnes of grain.

Ten government vessels and "many fishing ships" were helping with the ongoing rescue and clean up effort, the Chinese Transport Ministry said, adding that a South Korean coastguard ship was also on the scene.

A US Navy aircraft took part in the search on Sunday, scouring a wide area before returning to Kadena Air Base in Okinawa, Japan.

As Chinese authorities raced to contain the ship's leaking oil, experts expressed fears the accident could create an environmental disaster.

Greenpeace said in a statement it was "concerned about the potential environmental damage that could be caused by the 1 million barrels of crude oil on board".

If all of the Sanchi's cargo spills, it would be the biggest oil slick from a ship for decades.

By comparison, in the sixth-worst spill since the 1960s, the Odyssey dumped 132,000 tonnes some 700 nautical miles off Canada's Nova Scotia in 1988, according to figures from the International Tanker Owners Pollution Federation website.

China had two vessels working to contain the spill early Monday morning, the transport ministry said.

Iran's Petroleum Ministry said the tanker belongs to the National Iranian Tanker Company (NITC) and was delivering its cargo to South Korea's Hanwha Total. The ship and its cargo were insured, a statement said.

It was the second accident in less than two years involving a tanker owned by the NITC. In August 2016 an Iranian supertanker and a container ship collided in the Singapore Strait, causing damage to both vessels but no injuries or pollution.

Saturday's collision was the latest in a series of fatal maritime accidents in East Asia in recent years.

Last October, 13 crew on a Chinese fishing boat were killed after their vessel collided with a Hong Kong oil tanker off Japan's west coast.

Source: http://www.iran-daily.com/News/207772.html

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