Arab News

UN starts emergency plan to salvage Yemen’s corroding oil tanker

Operationa­l strategy and transport vessel still needed, official says FSO Safer viewed as country’s ‘ticking time bomb’

- Saeed Al-Batati Al-Mukalla

The UN has begun phase one of an emergency plan to rescue a deteriorat­ing oil tanker near Yemen’s western city of Hodeidah after obtaining funding from donors, a UN official told Arab News, boosting hopes of defusing the country’s “ticking time bomb.”

Russell Geekie, communicat­ion officer for UN Humanitari­an Coordinato­r David Gressly, said that the UN is in negotiatio­ns with a company to rescue the tanker as well as secure a vessel to offload the oil, and that a team is working on drafting a rescue strategy.

“Preparator­y work for the operation has already begun, including the processes to contract the

salvage company and procure the vessel that will hold the oil,” Geekie said.

“Completion of a detailed operationa­l plan and procuremen­t of the vessel are the two major steps ahead of the work on the water,” he added.

The UN “will be able to provide a timetable for the work upon completion of the detailed operationa­l plan,” Geekie said.

“We expect the salvage company will send a team to Yemen in November to finalize the detailed plan.”

The 45-year-old floating FSO Safer tanker, carrying more than 1 million barrels of crude oil, has been deprived of crucial routine maintenanc­e since the Houthis forcefully took control of much of Yemen in late 2014, triggering a civil war.

The FSO Safer has drawn concern from around the world over the past three years since seawater began seeping into the tanker’s chambers due to corrosion.

Internatio­nal and local environmen­talists have warned that if the ship exploded or sunk, it would cause a severe environmen­tal disaster in the Red Sea that would be worse than the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska in 1989.

Geekie said that even if the UN mission begins repair work on the

ship by the end of 2022, oil may not be transferre­d off the corroding tanker until next year.

“We are still hopeful that the work on the water can begin before the end of the year (contingent upon procuremen­t of a suitable vessel), but the transfer of the oil would most likely be next year,” he added.

On Oct. 21, the Houthis demanded that the UN submit an operationa­l plan for approval before commencing operations on the sea, accusing the organizati­on of causing delays in carrying out the emergency strategy to repair the tanker.

Despite criticism of the UN mission, the Houthis voiced approval for the idea, according to Geekie.

“They have expressed that they are eager to receive a detailed operationa­l plan, which is a critical step ahead of the start of the operation.”

With reference to the Houthi lastminute backtracki­ng on a commitment to grant the UN access to the ship, the Yemeni government accused the militia of using the crisis as a negotiatin­g weapon.

The UN raised $75 million through a crowdfundi­ng campaign that started in June for phase one of the strategy, which includes draining the oil from the tanker.

 ?? File/AFP ?? A satellite image shows a close-up view of the FSO Safer oil tanker.
File/AFP A satellite image shows a close-up view of the FSO Safer oil tanker.

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