Deccan Chronicle

Baltimore bridge collapses as cargo ship plows into pylon

Ship reported power issue, traffic flow on bridge halted; Cops rule out foul-play

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Baltimore, March 26: A massive freight ship stacked high with containers smashed into a bridge while sailing out of Baltimore early on Tuesday, sending cars and people into the river below and closing one of the busiest ports on the U.S. Eastern Seaboard.

Rescuers pulled out two survivors, one of whom was hospitalis­ed, and were searching for more in the Patapsco River after huge metal spans of the 1.6-mile (2.57 km) Francis Scott Key Bridge crumpled into the icy water at around 1:30 a.m.

The ship reported a power issue and officials halted the flow of traffic on the bridge between the mayday call and the collision, Maryland Governor Wes Moore said at a briefing.

“By being able to stop cars from coming over the bridge, these people are heroes. They saved lives last night,” he said.

Eight people were on the bridge at the time and six remained unaccounte­d for, the state’s transporta­tion secretary said hours after the collision, which closed one of the busiest ports in the United States.

The preliminar­y investigat­ion pointed to an accident, Moore said, and there were no credible reports of terrorism.

Ship traffic was suspended at the Port of Baltimore until further notice. It is the busiest U.S. port for car shipments, handling more than 750,000 vehicles in 2022, according to port data.

The closure of one of the U.S. East Coast’s major ports threatens to disrupt supplies of goods from cars, to coal and other commoditie­s like sugar. It could create bottleneck­s and increase delays and costs on the Eastern seaboard, experts say. The port handles the most car imports and is among the largest for coal exports.

The 948-foot (288.95 m) vessel, as long as three football pitches placed end

to end, had experience­d a momentary loss of propulsion and dropped anchors as part of emergency procedures before impact, its management company, Synergy Marine Pte Ltd reported, according to the Singapore Port Authority.

The Dali, owned by Grace Ocean Pte Ltd, collided with one of the pillars of the bridge, according to manager Synergy. All 22 crew members aboard the Singaporef­lagged vessel were accounted for, it said.

The U.S. Coast Guard reported the collapse at 1:27 a.m. (0627 GMT) and it deployed crews for an active search and rescue mission after the Singapore-flagged container ship forced the trellis-like bridge up into a mangled mass of metal.

President Joe Biden was being briefed on the collision, the White House said. He pledged that the federal government will pay the full cost to rebuild the Francis Scott Key Bridge. —

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