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Burning carrier off Dutch coast being towed away from shipping lanes
CGTN
This handout photograph taken on July 28, 2023 from the Coast Guard plane and released on July 29, 2023 by the Dutch coastguards, shows a fire aboard the Panamanian-registered car carrier ship Fremantle Highway. /CFP
This handout photograph taken on July 28, 2023 from the Coast Guard plane and released on July 29, 2023 by the Dutch coastguards, shows a fire aboard the Panamanian-registered car carrier ship Fremantle Highway. /CFP

This handout photograph taken on July 28, 2023 from the Coast Guard plane and released on July 29, 2023 by the Dutch coastguards, shows a fire aboard the Panamanian-registered car carrier ship Fremantle Highway. /CFP

A burning car carrier off the Dutch coast is being towed to a new location away from shipping routes as part of a difficult operation to salvage the ship, the Dutch water board Rijkswaterstaat and the media said.

The ship will be towed to a location 16 km north of the Dutch islands of Ameland and Schiermonnikoog, Rijkswaterstaat said in a statement on Sunday.

The towing operation began on Sunday, and it was not known when the ship, which was traveling from Germany to Egypt when the fire broke out, would arrive at its temporary destination, the board said, adding it depended on weather conditions, smoke development on the carrier, current and tide.

The fire on the Panamanian-registered Fremantle Highway, which was carrying new cars, resulted in the death of an Indian crew member and the injuries of seven others who jumped overboard to escape the flames. Japan's Shoei Kisen, which owns the ship, said the entire crew of 21 was Indian.

A Rijkswaterstaat spokesperson told the ANP Dutch press agency that at the temporary location, the ship would be further away from shipping routes and slightly out of the wind.

The relocation is an intermediate step in the difficult salvage operation, the spokesperson said.

Ship charter company "K" Line said on Friday that there were 3,783 vehicles on board the ship, including 498 battery electric vehicles, significantly more than the 25 initially reported.

The company declined to say anything about the car brands, including whether they included any cars from Japanese manufacturers.

EV lithium-ion batteries burn with twice the energy of a normal fire, and maritime officials and insurers say the industry has not kept up with the risks.

Source(s): Reuters

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