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Giant oil rig left drifting as two parts in rough seas

28 Aug 2015 - by Alan Peat
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On August 14, the obsolete

oil rig Pentagon 5000,

being towed for scrapping

in India, was abandoned

by its tug, the MV Indus

– believed to be because

the tow had parted in the

rough seas on that day.

And, with the tug

only having a basic seagoing

crew, it would be a

near-impossible task to

re-attach the tow line. As

the International Maritime

Organisation (IMO) said

in one of its reports: “Low

manning, with so-called

operational crews, makes

it extremely difficult to

fit an emergency towing

connection without a

pre-arranged system, in

particular if auxiliary

power on the vessel in

distress is not available.”

Meanwhile, the 1 368-

gross tonnage tug MV

Indus, owned by the

Indus Shipping & Trading

Corporation of Panama,

had just run for it. And,

on August 19, she was

reported by marinetraffic.

com to be sailing north

to Maputo where her

estimated time of arrival

(ETA) was logged as

August 20.

And this vessel, a

salvage specialist told

FTW, was “at 38 years

old not a young tug and

a bit on the light side for

the job”. He suggested

that it was also likely she

was “a bit underpowered

as well”.

So, until the middle

of last week this oil rig,

which had recently been

towed out of the Port of

Ngqura after a refuelling

stop for her tug, had been

left drifting off the SA

coast. And here, the big

worry for the SA Maritime

Safety Authority (Samsa),

according to Peter Newton

of Seaboard, was the

likelihood that she wasn’t

insured. Which he added,

if she ran ashore, would

mean SA would be left

with the difficult and

expensive task of removing

her.

By last Thursday (August

20) the rig was reported

to be offshore of Mossel

Bay – situated exactly half

way between Cape Town

and Port Elizabeth (both

400 km away). And this

was where the Cape Townbased

salvage operation,

Smit Amandla – contracted

by Samsa to tow the rig

to Algoa Bay – had been

making attempts to board

and connect a tow line to

its SA-flagged,

2 918-gross tonnage tug,

named, like the company,

Smit Amandla.

However, the first

attempt by the salvage

team to board the rig early

on Thursday was thwarted

by heavy fog, with the

helicopter having to return

them to Mossel Bay. But

they managed to get on

board later. They then had

a couple of failed attempts

to connect the tow in the

heavy weather.

However, on FTW’s last

contact with Smit Amandla

on Sunday evening,

executive Claire Gomes told

us that the tow had been

successfully connected on

Saturday.

“They are currently 34

nautical miles off the coast,

still heading north, with

an ETA in Algoa Bay of

Tuesday,” she added.

But the rig didn’t have

an anchor rigged, and as

Samsa had not indicated

to the salvors that another

tug had been contracted

to take over the tow to the

scrapyard, Gomes said that

it was likely the rig would

have to be towed into the

Port of Ngqura.

She has also assured

us that she will keep us

updated on the issue, so

we can keep you informed

through FTW Online.

CAPTION

Oil rig cut adrift In a potentially costly event for SA, a giant oil rig has just

been left drifting, unmanned and all on its own, off the coast.

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