Baltimore Sun

With Ever Forward still stuck, authoritie­s plan 2-week process of removing some containers

- By Hayes Gardner

The next step in the saga of the stuck Ever Forward is one that officials hoped to avoid from the beginning — removing the containers.

The 1,095-foot cargo ship has been stuck in the Chesapeake Bay off the coast of Pasadena since missing a turn in a channel on March 13 and running aground in shallow waters. A week later, two clamshell dredges began digging up the bottom surroundin­g the ship’s hull and then twice last week, Tuesday and Wednesday, at least five tugboats pushed and pulled on the ship, hoping to free it from the bay’s muddy grasp. Those tries were unsuccessf­ul.

So, a new plan from authoritie­s is to remove some — not all — of the containers that sit on the ship. The Ever Forward can carry as many as 12,000 20-foot units of the trucksized shipping containers, but currently has 4,964 full containers on board. A few hundred are expected to be removed.

The process of removing containers is cumbersome and complicate­d, and U.S. Coast Guard Capt. David O’Connell said two weeks ago that the hope would be to free the ship without removing the containers. “Still planning for

it,” he said March 22 of potentiall­y needing to remove containers, “but hoping that that won’t be the case.”

After extensive dredging and two unsuccessf­ul tow attempts, container removal offers the “best chance of successful­ly re-floating,” the ship, the Coast Guard said in a news release Monday.

Dredging around the ship is ongoing, and the containers will be removed as soon as two crane barges are installed, the Coast Guard said, noting that it would take “approximat­ely two weeks” to remove the containers.

During daylight hours, cranes will lift the containers onto receiving barges. Those barges will ferry the containers back to the Seagirt Marine Terminal in Baltimore.

“Once the containers are removed, tugs and pull barges will attempt another refloat,” the U.S.

Coast Guard stated.

Officials had worried initially that container removal would necessitat­e closing the shipping channel, but that will not be the case, and the channel will remain open to one-way traffic during the process.

The Ever Forward is owned by the same company, Evergreen Marine Corp., as the Ever Given, the ship that blocked traffic to the Suez Canal last year for six days. And while the Ever Forward has been stuck for more than three times as long as its sister ship, it has not had nearly the same impact on the supply chain; it is not blocking the shipping channel, and the only traffic pause has come during the two refloating attempts last week.

The reason for the grounding remains unknown as the Coast Guard investigat­es. Maryland law requires foreign vessels to employ an expert pilot licensed by the state to navigate state waters. The Associatio­n of Maryland Pilots has not responded to a request for a comment.

Evergreen and its insurers are expected to pay for the refloating process, but last week, the company declared General Average, a standard of maritime law that requires that all stakeholde­rs in sea cargo, including the cargo owners,

share in any loss as part of an emergency.

“Considerin­g that the complexity of further rescue operations will require more manpower, equipment and costs to refloat the stranded vessel as soon as possible, Evergreen has for cautionary purposes declared General Average,” Evergreen said in a statement.

The refloating effort, which has involved the Coast Guard and the Maryland Department of the Environmen­t working alongside Evergreen and ship salvor Donjon-Smit, has been a flexible one. Following two refloating attempts, a third try to pull the boat free with seven tugboats and two barges had been scheduled for Wednesday, but that attempt was canceled after officials decided container removal would be needed.

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