Stamford Advocate

NTSB: Used vehicle battery caused weeklong cargo ship fire

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JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — An electrical fault from an improperly disconnect­ed battery in a used vehicle led to the fire aboard a cargo ship docked in Florida that resulted in $40 million worth of damage, officials said Thursday.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board released a report of its findings, along with eight safety recommenda­tions to federal regulators and the companies involved in the June 2020 blaze.

According to the NTSB report, nine firefighte­rs were injured while re-* sponding to the Hoegh Xiamen at the Port of Jacksonvil­le. None of the vessel’s 21 crewmember­s was injured. The fire took over a week to extinguish.

The Hoegh Xiamen and its cargo of 2,420 used vehicles were declared a total loss, officials said. The vessel was towed to Turkey to be recycled in August 2020 after salvage operations were completed.

The NTSB concluded many of the vehicles loaded onto the vessel had batteries that were not disconnect­ed and secured in accordance with procedures, which increased the risk of electrical arcing and component faults. During loading operations, both the loading personnel and crew missed opportunit­ies to address these hazards, officials said.

The investigat­ion showed that the detection of the fire was delayed because the vessels’ fire detection systems had not yet been reactivate­d after loading was completed. The Jacksonvil­le Fire and Rescue Department’s response to the fire was delayed because the ship’s master didn’t immediatel­y have available contact informatio­n for search and rescue authoritie­s and did not know how to report a fire to local authoritie­s.

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