Rena update #125 – Barges Nearer As Light Oil Spills
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Rena, with a sheen of oil stretching to the south-west. Motiti Island is in the distance, seen from an overflight this morning
Update #125 – as at 10.30am 5 December
•
Rena is still intact after the
weekend’s stormy weather. Electronic sensors monitoring
the movement of the wreck indicated some extra movement
during last night’s swells, but Svitzer advises there was
nothing untoward in the readings.
• Salvage teams
are going out to the wreck this morning to resume work on
installing patches in the passages on
Rena, to improve buoyancy.
•
No container removal operations were undertaken over the
weekend due to high swells. Container removal operations are
not expected to resume for the next day or so.
• A
total of 167 containers have been removed from
Rena. There were 1368 containers on
board when Rena ran aground, and an
estimated 87 were washed overboard on 12 October, leaving
1114 on board today.
• The crane barge
Smit Borneo is expected to arrive
from Singapore around 11am today. The barge will remain in
port for several days while the barge is prepared for
container removal.
• The Sea Tow
60 is also in port.
• The anchor
handling tug Go Canopus remains
attached to Rena.
• Winds
are blowing north easterly at about 15 knots, shifting to
northwest today with low cloud and swells of a maximum 4m.
Another weather spike is expected tomorrow night and wet
weather is set to continue for the next few days.
•
The rough weather resulted in the release of a small amount
of weathered oil from under the wreck on Saturday night.
This may result in some light oiling reaching beaches
between Pāpāmoa and Mount Maungaui. Members of the public
may see sticky tar balls reach the shoreline.
•
Shoreline Clean Up Assessment Teams will be checking the
beaches today, and clean-up crews will be working at Mount
Maunganui, Pāpāmoa and Matakana Island.
•
Container recovery specialists Braemar Howells advise that
the rough weather could result in some debris from
containers reaching shorelines – anyone seeing any debris
should contact 0800 OIL
SPILL.
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Light patches of weathered oil, moved along by the tide and the wind, stretching from Rena, seen from an overflight this morning.
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Rena, with a sheen of oil stretching from the wreck, seen from an overflight this morning
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Darker patches or slugs of oil, seen in a natural collection point on the lee side of the wreck from an overflight this morning
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The stern of Rena, now nearly cleared of containers, seen from an overflight this afternoon