Rescuers search water for survivors after ship collides with Baltimore
bridge
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[March 26, 2024]
By Nathan Howard
BALTIMORE (Reuters) -A major bridge collapsed in the U.S. port of
Baltimore in the early hours of Tuesday after being struck by a
container ship, plunging cars and as many as 20 people into the river
below.
Rescuers were searching for survivors in the Patapsco River after huge
spans of the 1.6-mile (2.57 km) Francis Scott Key Bridge crumpled into
the water.
As many as 20 people could be in the river along with "numerous
vehicles, and possibly a tractor-trailer or a vehicle as large as a
tractor-trailer, (that) went into the river," Kevin Cartwright, the
spokesperson for Baltimore City Fire Department, told Reuters.
"This is a mass-casualty, multi-agency event," he said. "This operation
is going to extend for many days."
A live video posted on YouTube showed the ship ploughing into the bridge
in darkness. The headlights of vehicles could be seen on the bridge as
it crashed down into the water and the ship caught fire. Reuters could
not immediately verify the videos.
Maryland Governor Wes Moore declared a state of emergency. He said in a
statement the state was "working with an interagency team to quickly
deploy federal resources from the Biden Administration." The FBI in
Baltimore said on X its personnel were "on scene".
Baltimore is the busiest U.S. port for car shipments, handling more than
750,000 vehicles in 2022, according to data from the Maryland Port
Administration.
It was not immediately clear if any other vessels had been damaged or
whether operations had halted to and from the port, shipping and
insurance sources said.
"We received several 911 calls at around 1:30 am, that a vessel struck
the Key Bridge in Baltimore, causing the collapse," Cartwright said.
Baltimore police said they had been notified of the incident at 1:35
a.m. ET (535 GMT).
The ship was identified by LSEG ship tracking data as a
Singapore-flagged container ship, the Dali. The registered owner of the
ship is Grace Ocean Pte Ltd and the manager is Synergy Marine Group,
LSEG data show.
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Emergency personnel operate at the scene of the Francis Scott Key
Bridge collapse in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S., in this picture
released on March 26, 2024. Harford County MD Fire & EMS/Handout via
REUTERS
Synergy Marine Corp said the Dali collided with one of the pillars
of the bridge and that all its crew members, including the two
pilots, had been accounted for and there were no reports of any
injuries.
The Dali was chartered by shipping company Maersk at the time of the
incident, the Danish company said in a statement.
"We are horrified by what has happened in Baltimore, and our
thoughts are with all of those affected," Maersk said.
Reuters could not immediately reach Grace Ocean for comment.
Baltimore port's private and public terminals handled 847,158 autos
and light trucks in 2023, the most of any U.S. port. The port also
handles farm and construction machinery, sugar, gypsum and coal,
according to a Maryland government website.
The port handles imports and exports for major automakers including
Nissan, Toyota, General Motors, Volvo, Jaguar Land Rover and the
Volkswagen group - including luxury models for Audi, Lamborghini and
Bentley.
More than 40 ships remained inside Baltimore port including small
cargo ships, tug boats and pleasure craft, data from ship tracking
and maritime analytics provider MarineTraffic showed. At least 30
other ships had signalled their destination was Baltimore, the data
showed.
The port did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for
comment.
The bridge, named after Francis Scott Key, author of the Star
Spangled Banner, opened in 1977.
(Reporting by Shubham Kaliam Harshita Meenaktshi, Shreya Biswas,
Jyoti Narayan and Swati Verma in Bengaluru, Additional reporting by
Christian Schmollinger, Arpan Daniel Varghese, Rich McKay and David
Shepardson; Writing by Ros Russell; Editing by Andrew Heavens,
Philippa Fletcher, Gerry Doyle and Nick Macfie)
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