Boston Sunday Globe

Ship’s mechanical failure probed in bridge crash

Md. investigat­ors consider bad gas, generator issues

- By Mike Baker and Peter Eavis

Just minutes before the cargo ship Dali was set to glide under Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge, the ship’s alarms began to blare. The lights went out. The engine halted. Even the rudder, which the crew uses to maneuver the vessel, was frozen.

As a frantic effort to restore the ship was underway, the pilot soon recognized that the aimless vessel was drifting toward disaster, and called for help.

The cascading collapse of the vessel’s most crucial operating systems left the Dali adrift until it ultimately crashed into the Key bridge, knocking the span into the river and killing six people. But as crews this past week were still sorting out how to disentangl­e the ship and recover the bodies of those who died, investigat­ors were also turning to the most central question: What could have caused such a catastroph­ic failure?

Engineers, captains, and shipping officials around the world are waiting for that answer in an era when the industry’s largest ships can carry four times as much cargo as those just a few decades ago, navigating through congested urban ports under bridges that may carry tens of thousands of people a day.

Already, a few key questions are emerging, according to engineers and shipping experts monitoring the investigat­ion, and most of them point to the electrical generators that power nearly every system on the 984-foot vessel — not only the lights, navigation, and steering but also the pumps that provide fuel, oil, and water to the massive diesel engine.

The “complete blackout” reported by the pilot is hard to explain in today’s shipping world, in which large commercial vessels now operate with a range of automation, computeriz­ed monitoring, and built-in redundanci­es and backup systems designed to avert just such a calamity.

Yet there is a wide range of possible factors contributi­ng to the failure that investigat­ors will have to sift through as they interview crew members, examine fuel supplies, and scrutinize the ship systems that broke down that night.

If there was faulty maintenanc­e, it could have caused a delay in starting the emergency backup generator, or an electrical fault could have prevented it from remaining engaged. Contaminat­ed fuel or an inadverten­tly closed valve could have fouled or starved the main generators. Human error could have set off problems or failed to overcome them. The ship’s own automation could have led to equipment glitches. Or a fire could have broken out and damaged crucial equipment.

The answers will have implicatio­ns not only for internatio­nal shipping but also for who is liable for damages that S&P Global Ratings estimated at more than $2 billion.

Grace Ocean Private, the Singapore-based company that owns the Dali, said it was “fully cooperatin­g with federal and state government agencies.” Grace Ocean’s owner is Yoshimasa Abe, a Japanese citizen who owns at least two shipping lines and more than 50 vessels, including some of the world’s biggest container ships. While the Dali was insured, Abe’s company potentiall­y faces large claims against it, depending on the findings of the investigat­ors.

Given the scope of the failure, it is possible that there were multiple problems. Timothy McCoy, a professor specializi­ng in marine engineerin­g at the University of Michigan, said that much like a plane crash, an extensive breakdown of a ship’s systems typically involves a sequence of events.

A close look at the potential factors would include many of the most essential elements in the operation of a modern cargo vessel — including the fuel that feeds the ship’s 55,000-horsepower diesel engine that in turn powers the ship’s propeller.

Fuel also powers the huge generators that provide electricit­y to container ships. And a ship like the Dali needs electrical power to run its main engine — its fuel injectors are electrical­ly powered, for instance — and steer its rudder. Without electricit­y, the ship can go adrift.

At the time it was built, 2015, the Dali had four generators, according to S&P Maritime Portal, a shipping data service. Not all of them run at once, usually, but container vessels leaving port will typically have an extra generator running, to provide reserve power if needed. “At least two should be online at the same time,” said Mark Bulaclac, an academic on maritime issues who has also served as an engineer on container ships.

If all generators were running on a common source of bad fuel, that might have caused them all to fail.

Henry Lipian, a forensic crash investigat­or who previously worked in the Coast Guard, said the sudden loss of the ship’s generators led him to think of fuel problems as a potential culprit.

He said investigat­ors would need to look at the fuel on board, how it was delivered, whether it had been tested beforehand, and what filtration systems were on the ship. But he said that a problem with the fuel valves could be another explanatio­n.

“I’d want to start tracing all of those fuel lines,” he said.

In Baltimore, investigat­ors were in the process of collecting a fuel sample from the Dali to examine the quality, viscosity, and signs of any contaminan­ts, said Jennifer Homendy, the chair of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

Yet other experts said there were also reasons to doubt the contaminat­ed fuel scenario. New fuels typically undergo testing, and duplicate filtration systems can help clean out problemati­c components that were not flagged in testing. No reports have emerged of other ships having a problem from the same batch of fuel.

Maritime engineers say an electrical chain reaction could also have caused all the generators to go down. When one generator fails, it can create a situation in which there is too much demand for too little supply of electricit­y. Other generators are then at risk of being damaged, so the system will shut them down, too, said Richard Burke, a professor of naval architectu­re and marine engineerin­g at SUNY Maritime College in New York.

“It’s as if you and I are both holding up a heavy weight, and I let go,” he said, “You can’t hold it by yourself, so you drop the weight.”

A haywire generator could also zap the electrical distributi­on system on the ship, said Captain Morgan McManus, an instructor at SUNY Maritime College.

When all the main generators fail, ships rely on a backup generator that is typically situated above the water line in another area of the ship, with its own fuel source.

Because some lights came back on after the Dali experience­d its initial blackout, it appears the backup generator did activate, but only after a roughly one-minute delay. Even then, the lights appeared to go back off, then on again, raising the possibilit­y of a problem with the backup generator.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF/NEW YORK TIMES ?? An aerial view of the Dali container ship with a collapsed section of the Francis Scott Key Bridge across its bow.
ERIN SCHAFF/NEW YORK TIMES An aerial view of the Dali container ship with a collapsed section of the Francis Scott Key Bridge across its bow.

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