gCaptain.com

A Blog About Ships

Fastream Offshore Leaderboard



Oil Spill In Mississippi River

July 24th, 2008 · Comments - by John -

Print This Post Print This Post Email Subscription Button Send To Friend

West Marine 468

CNN tells us:

The 420,000-gallon oil spill polluting 98 miles of the river happened early Wednesday when a 61-foot barge carrying the fuel collided with a tanker, just north of the massive bridges connecting downtown New Orleans to communities across the river.

Operations to salvage the barge, which is owned by American Commercial Lines Inc., were to begin Thursday, said Petty Officer Jaclyn Young. She said the barge was no longer leaking oil.

Containment booms were installed Wednesday to prevent the oil from spreading to environmentally sensitive areas and seeping into water-supply intake valves in Gretna, St. Bernard, Dalcour, Belle Chasse, Pointe a la Hache, Port Sulphur and Boothville-Venice, Young said.

The tug Mel Oliver, which had been hired to push the barge upriver, had no properly licensed crew on board the vessel, Young said. The tugboat pilot had only an apprentice mate’s license instead of the required master’s license, she added.

We are still in the process of sorting out information regarding the cause of the incident but are familiar with the state of American Commercial Lines in light of their recent financial difficulties. In our close working relationship with Northeast Maritime Institute we have learned that ACL had abruptly ended a contract established to train ACL’s mariners. This training was developed to provide unlicensed crew members training as captains and helped them get both the skills need to navigate inland rivers. Specific to collision avoidance the Institute used hands on training from licensed instructors as well as advanced ship simulators that allow mariners to simulate transits on the Mississippi.

gCaptain is also investigating a death that occurred recently when a captain fell overboard. Initial reports question the role vessel maintenance played in the incident.

Stay tuned HERE for continued coverage.

UPDATE:

We have been informed that the tugboat pushing an American Commercial Lines barge was owned and operated by a 3rd party vendor, not ACL. With further research gCaptain has also learned that ACL had identified the need to vet the level of training provided to mariners by vendor companies. According to a Northeast Maritime Institute representative they had made significant progress in the development of this program when ACL walked away from the training contract with NMI in June of this year.



About The Author

Captain John Konrad is co-founder of Unofficial Networks and Editor In Chief of this blog. He is a USCG licensed Master Mariner of Unlimited Tonnage and, since graduating from SUNY Maritime College, has sailed a variety of ships from ports around the world. He currently lives in Morro Bay, California with his wife and two children.
Full Profile: John
Enjoy this story? Subscribe to or feed Email Subscription Button OR Send to friend Email Subscription Button

Related Posts




Email Button Facebook Button Google Button Twitter Button Stumbleupon Button Bookmark and Share

Categories: MARPOL Incidents

Tags: · , ,

-





Viewing 2 Comments

Trackbacks

close Reblog this comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
 


Comments


Popular Topics



Sponsors



Maritime and Offshore Recruitment

Spurs

Mariner Taxes Logo

Mariner Taxes



Spot Messenger Contest


Win a Spot Satellite Messenger

The Maritime Executive Magazine








Your Ad Here




Authors



Follow Us



Categories



Recent Posts



Popular

Shipping Archives

Read A Random Story