Clive Bull 1am - 4am
Salvage team gets control of stricken ship off Norway’s coast
8 April 2021, 12:04
The Dutch-registered vessel was being towed back to the port of Alesund three days after the crew was evacuated.
A joint Norwegian-Dutch salvage operation defied heavy seas to get an abandoned Dutch cargo ship under control off the coast of Norway and was towing the ship to port.
Norwegian officials said the rescue operation of the Eemslift Hendrika, a Netherlands-registered ship designed to carry large boats, was completed early on Thursday and the ship is slowly being towed to the western city of Alesund.
The ship’s crew of 12 was rescued by helicopter late Monday after a power outage in its main engine.
The Norwegian Coastal Administration, based in Alesund, launched salvage operation late Wednesday as it became clear that churning seas could make the drifting ship crash into the shore.
The vessel has substantial quantities of diesel and fuel in its tanks, which could have caused an environmental disaster.
Norwegian maritime authorities issued an emergency alert late Wednesday and started preparations in case of an oil spill.
The Eemslift Hendrika was adrift in the area where the North Sea and Norwegian Sea meet.
Salvage experts were lowered onto the sharply listing ship on Wednesday to attach towing ropes to waiting tug boats.
One large boat aboard the deck of the six-year-old cargo ship fell off in heavy seas on Tuesday but was found by the Norwegian coast guard and secured to another tug boat.