US Navy to pump oil from ship stuck in Philippines
PHILIPPINES: The US Navy said Thursday it needed to remove thousands
of litres of oil from a minesweeper stuck on World Heritage-listed coral
in the Philippines, warning it was too badly damaged to be towed away.
The 68-metre (224-foot) USS Guardian, which became embedded in the
Tubbataha Reef a week ago, will have to be lifted onto another ship or
barge, a process that might take another fortnight, said Rear Admiral
Thomas Carney. “The option that we hoped to be able to tow the ship off
the reef is not available,” said Carney, who heads the US Navy’s
logistics group in the western Pacific.
“It’s too badly damaged. It’s got hull penetrations in several
places, and there’s a significant amount of water inside the ship right
now.”
He said the Guardian had listed after being battered by huge waves,
and the most pressing issue was to remove 57,000 litres (15,000 US
gallons) of fuel. “The first priority is to get the fuel out of the ship
as soon as possible,” Carney told reporters.
Carney described the salvage operation as “a very deliberate,
complicated process” involving at least two more US Navy vessels that
could take up to two weeks to complete.
“It depends on the environmental conditions out there as to how
safely we can proceed,” he said of the timeline. American divers had
been on board to determine the ship’s stability, as well as secure or
remove crucial equipment inside the vessel to make it lighter for
lifting, Carney said. While Carney said it was too early to determine
how much damage the Guardian has caused, the Philippine government
reported this week that about 1,000 square metres (3,280 square feet) of
coral had already been impacted.
AFP |