Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




FROTH AND BUBBLE
US Navy to pump oil from ship stuck in Philippines
by Staff Writers
Manila (AFP) Jan 24, 2013


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, Rear Admiral Thomas Carney said.

"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.

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.

This equates out to roughly one percent of Tubbataha, a UNESCO World Heritage site in a remote part of the Sulu Sea famous for its rich marine life and coral that rival Australia's Great Barrier Reef.

The incident has stoked anger in the Philippines, with the US Navy yet to explain why it was sailing through a protected marine sanctuary en route to Indonesia.

The head of the agency supervising the sanctuary said this week that the captain of the ship ignored warnings that it was nearing the reef. The agency recommended the US Navy be fined for "unauthorised entry" into the area.

Carney declined to explain why the Guardian was sailing in the area, saying that was still the subject of investigation, however he repeated a US Navy apology made last weekend.

"We express our deepest regret that we are in this situation, and we are committed to removing the ship from the reef as soon as possible," he said.

.


Related Links
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FROTH AND BUBBLE
Swiss, EU leaders hail mercury treaty
Geneva, Switzerland (UPI) Jan 23, 2013
Swiss and other European leaders this week hailed the adoption of a U.N.-backed global treaty, known as the Minamata Convention, curbing releases of mercury. The treaty was approved by 147 governments Saturday at a forum in Geneva, Switzerland, bringing praise from the European Union, Ireland, Switzerland and other European supporters. The Minamata Convention on Mercury - named ... read more


FROTH AND BUBBLE
Researchers move Barkhausen Effect forward

Computer breakthrough: Code of life becomes databank

Kim Dotcom apologises for Mega bugs

World's Most Complex 2D Laser Beamsteering Array Demonstrated

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Insights from the SIA DoD Commercial SATCOM Users' Workshop

Boeing to Upgrade Combat Survivor Evader Locator Radios, Base Stations

NATO member orders Falcon III radios

Lockheed Martin Completes Work on US Navy's Second MUOS Satellite

FROTH AND BUBBLE
NASA Selects Experimental Commercial Suborbital Flight Payloads

Payload elements come together in Starsem's wrap-up Soyuz mission from Baikonur Cosmodrome for Globalstar

Amazonas 3 in Kourou for Ariane 5 year-opening launch campaign

Suborbital Space Research and Education Conference Scheduled for June 2013

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Lockheed Martin Awarded Contract to Sustain Ground Station for Global Positioning System

China promotes Beidou technology on transport vehicles

New location system could compete with GPS

Beidou's unique services attractive to Chinese companies

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Sikorsky, Boeing Partner for Joint Multi-Role Future Vertical Lift Requirements

Airlines turn profit from EU freeze on carbon tax: environmentalists

Brazil signs deal to manufacture 'copters

Sound may protect airliners from birds

FROTH AND BUBBLE
New 2D material for next generation high-speed electronics

UGA researchers invent new material for warm-white LEDs

Intel profits slide, outlook weak as woes continue

New biochip technology uses tiny whirlpools to corral microbes

FROTH AND BUBBLE
RapidEye Commits to Data Continuity; Discusses System Health and Life Span

Pleiades 1B captures its first images using e2v sensors

NASA's Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph Mission Satellite Completed

Landsat Senses a Disturbance in the Forest

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Beijing vows efforts to fight pollution: state media

US Navy to pump oil from ship stuck in Philippines

Mercury treaty adopted in Geneva by 140 countries: UN

Brussels urges quick decision on freeze in pollution credits




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement