The Press

New channel lets trapped ships escape

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Some of the biggest ships trapped behind the wreckage of Baltimore’s Key Bridge can finally escape, as a new, deeper temporary channel opened for carefully choreograp­hed journeys in and out of the port.

On Thursday morning (local time), the Panama-flagged Balsa 94, escorted by a pair of tugboats, slipped through a new 91-metre-wide, 12m-deep channel on its way to eastern Canada.

Later in the day, a large ship that carries vehicles and a third cargo ship also headed out through the channel, while others were set to enter the port, authoritie­s said.

“The channel is active and in use,” said petty officer Michael Himes, of the Key Bridge Response Unified Command.

The ships had been trapped with a handful of other large vessels since the 95,000-gross-tonne Dali slammed into a bridge pier on March 26 after an electrical malfunctio­n that remains under investigat­ion. Six bridge workers were killed.

There’s been a trickle of marine traffic and commerce in recent weeks, with more than 140 smaller ships circumvent­ing the disabled Dali and the crumpled steel debris blocking the main shipping channel by using smaller temporary channels.

The deeper channel is set to offer a limited window for the passage of bigger vessels. The US Department of Transporta­tion had said there were three bulk carriers, two general cargo ships, a tanker and a vehicle carrier stuck behind the destroyed bridge, along with four US military vessels.

But on Monday, that window will shut again, Himes said. Teams of workers are set to reach a delicate phase of the post-disaster cleanup next week, and authoritie­s want to protect them from large vessels passing by. The channel will open again around May 10. – Washington Post

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The first cargo ship passes by the Francis Scott Key Memorial Bridge wreckage in Baltimore via a new deep-water channel.
GETTY IMAGES The first cargo ship passes by the Francis Scott Key Memorial Bridge wreckage in Baltimore via a new deep-water channel.

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