South China Morning Post

Port of Baltimore set to reopen by end of the month

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The US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) has said it expected to open a new channel to the Port of Baltimore by the end of April, freeing up commercial shipping blocked by a collapsed bridge, and then restore port access to full capacity by the end of May.

The main channel has been blocked by wreckage since the fully loaded container ship Dali lost power and rammed into a support column of the Francis Scott Key Bridge on March 26, killing six road workers and causing the highway bridge to tumble into the Patapsco River.

The Army Corps, part of a multi-agency team responding to the Baltimore disaster, announced the plans one day ahead of a visit by President Joe Biden, saying within four weeks the channel would be suitable for some roll-on/roll-off vessels that transport vehicles and farm equipment.

The Port of Baltimore ranks first in the United States for the volume it handles of cars and light trucks and farm and constructi­on machinery, according to the state of Maryland. Most of that traffic has been suspended since the accident, though some terminal operations outside the affected area have resumed.

Earlier this week, two auxiliary channels suitable for emergency vessels, tugs and barges were opened on either side of the disabled ship, which is stuck beneath bridge debris with thousands of containers and a crew of 21 sailors still aboard.

But with depths limited to 3.4 metres and 4.3 metres, those two channels are too shallow for major cargo ships, which need a depth of 10.7 metres.

“USACE expects to open a limited access channel 280 feet wide and 35 feet deep [85.3 metres and 10.7 metres] to the Port of Baltimore within the next four weeks – by the end of April,” the corps said. By the end of May, the corps said it expected to restore port access to its full capacity with a navigation channel that was 213.4 metres wide and 15.2 metres deep.

Before then, salvage crews must remove steel bridge debris from atop the Dali to extract it from the harbour, then clear the twisted metal and highway wreckage that fell into the water.

Ensconced within that debris are the bodies of four of the six highway workers who were killed.

The Biden administra­tion has provided an initial US$60 million in emergency funding to clear the channel and begin recovery, and Biden has said he would ask Congress to fund the complete rebuilding of the bridge.

 ?? ?? The disabled cargo ship remains stuck beneath bridge debris.
The disabled cargo ship remains stuck beneath bridge debris.

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