The Borneo Post

Freighter leaves Baltimore after new temporary channel opened

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A cargo ship trapped by the collapse of a major bridge in Baltimore last month successful­ly left the port city on Thursday after a new temporary channel was opened, shipping data show.

The March 26 collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge after it was struck by a huge container ship knocked out a major transit route into the port city and trapped cargo vessels inside.

The authoritie­s have been working around the clock to locate the bodies of six road maintenanc­e workers who died in the disaster and reopen the channel to shipping traffic as swiftly as possible.

A new temporary channel was opened on Thursday morning – the fourth so far – to allow larger vessels to leave the port, Enoch Bang, a US government official working on the multiagenc­y response team, told AFP by phone. The Panama-flagged Balsa 94 then left the port in the morning, passing by the site of the collapsed bridge, according to MarineTraf­fic.com.

The 106-metre long, 19-metre wide vessel appears to have passed the wreckage of the bridge without incident, and has since continued its journey through the Chesapeake Bay en route to Saint John, Canada, where it is expected to arrive on Sunday.

The temporary channel opened Thursday has a minimum depth of 10.7 metres, according to a recent statement from the US Coast Guard, which is part of the response team.

It will remain open until Monday or Tuesday, depending on the weather, the Coast Guard said, after which it will be closed to allow for “critical and highly dynamic salvage operations to advance efforts to fully clear the channel.”

The US Army has said it is aiming to reopen a deeper, permanent, channel by the end of May, restoring port access to normal capacity.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? The ‘Carmen’, the third and largest ship to leave port (right), sailing past the cargo ship Dali (left) and the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, Maryland. Four weeks since the maritime accident in the Patapsco River, a temporary channel openned to allow ships stuck in the Port of Baltimore to leave.
— AFP photo The ‘Carmen’, the third and largest ship to leave port (right), sailing past the cargo ship Dali (left) and the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, Maryland. Four weeks since the maritime accident in the Patapsco River, a temporary channel openned to allow ships stuck in the Port of Baltimore to leave.

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