El
Faro reported 'hull breach' before sinking in hurricane
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[October 21, 2015]
By David Adams
MIAMI (Reuters) - The captain of the U.S.
cargo ship El Faro reported "a hull breach" and said a hatch had blown
open before the vessel sank off the Bahamas in a hurricane earlier this
month, the National Transportation Safety Board said on Tuesday.
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In a recorded satellite phone call Captain Michael Davidson told
the ship's owner he had "a marine emergency" after taking on water
in one of the holds, the NTSB said in an update on its two-week-old
investigation of the sinking.
It said the captain also reported that the ship had lost its main
propulsion unit and that engineers could not get it restarted.
The El Faro and its 33 mostly American crew members disappeared on
Oct. 1 after sailing into the path of Hurricane Joaquin while en
route from Jacksonville, Florida, to Puerto Rico in the worst cargo
shipping disaster involving a U.S.-flagged vessel since 1983.
The ship's owner, New Jersey-based Tote Inc, has previously said the
loss of propulsion is likely what doomed the ship as it was engulfed
by high seas whipped up by Joaquin.
According to the NTSB, electronic distress alerts were received by
the U.S. Coast Guard from three separate sources on board El Faro
but the Coast Guard never had direct voice communications with the
ship.
It was not clear if the hull breach was directly related to the
ship's loss of propulsion, perhaps due to water flooding the engine
room and short-circuiting the ship's generators.
The El Faro had successfully completed its most recent inspections
and surveys by the Coast Guard and the American Bureau of Shipping
"meeting all rules and regulations," the NTSB said in Tuesday's
update.
It said Tote told investigators that El Faro was undergoing
"modifications" by welders and machinists prior to redeploying to
the U.S. West Coast. A boiler service company had recommended
service to both the ship's boilers during an upcoming drydock that
had already been scheduled for Nov. 6, the NTSB added.
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Tote has previously stated that the ship was undergoing engine room
work, including during the last voyage but that it was unrelated to
the propulsion system.
On Monday, a Navy salvage vessel hired by the NTSB left Virginia for
the Bahamas to try to recover the ship's voyage data recorder,
similar to the black box on airplanes, officials said.
The day after setting sail on the doomed voyage the captain emailed
a company safety official that he planned to take a route south of
the predicted path of the hurricane and would pass about 65 miles
(105 km) from its center, the NTSB said.
U.S. forecasters issued an advisory early on Oct. 1 predicting seas
of 30 feet (9 meters) with sustained winds increasing to 121 miles
(195 km) per hour as the El Faro approached the wall of the eye of
the hurricane, the NTSB noted.
According to electronic alert data sent five hours later by the El
Faro, the ship's last reported position was about 20 miles (32 km)
from the edge of the eye of the hurricane, the NTSB said.
(Reporting by David Adams; Editing by Tom Brown)
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