Wednesday, August 1, 2012

International team of 40 ready to remove Rena's bow

From the New Zealand Herald:  International team of 40 ready to remove Rena's bow

Up to 40 wreckage removal experts from around the world will converge on Tauranga in the next week for the second phase of the Rena recovery.

Salvage authorities announced plans to remove the bow section of the stricken cargo ship this week but said yesterday they were yet to figure out how to remove the rest of the Rena from Astrolabe Reef. The ship ran aground on the reef as it headed towards Tauranga early on October 5, spewing oil and debris across the coast.

Clean-ups have helped clear remaining rubbish but the wreck remains on a 22-degree list on the reef in rough water described as like a washing machine.

The operation to remove the bow will begin on August 3 when a salvage team boards the ship and cuts the section into pieces.

Divers will cut around the bow up to 1m below the surface, using a combination of magnesium steel with oxygen and electricity to cut the metal.

After two weeks, it is expected helicopters will take the pieces back to port. It is estimated 2400 tonnes of steel will be dumped as scrap.

New salvage master Frank Leckey, of Resolve Marine Group, said a job as big as the Rena came along once every six to seven years. The operation would take up to 150 days with little impact on Motiti Island or the coast. Several crane barges and tugs would be used.

John Owen of Swedish Club, Rena's liability insurer, said there were no plans yet for the rest of the wreckage.

 

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