Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cargo ship of cars burns off Dutch coast

- MIKE CORDER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Geir Moulson of The Associated Press.

THE HAGUE, Netherland­s — A cargo ship packed with cars burned close to a world-renowned bird habitat off the Dutch coast Thursday as firefighte­rs and salvage crews waited for the flames from a fire that started more than a day earlier to subside before attempting to board the vessel.

The Fremantle Highway was sailing from the German port of Bremerhave­n to Singapore when it caught fire in the North Sea shortly before midnight Tuesday about 17 miles north of the Dutch island of Ameland, sparking fears of an environmen­tal disaster.

One crew member died and others were injured early Wednesday. The entire crew, made up of 21 Indian nationals, has been evacuated from the ship. The cause of the fire hasn’t been establishe­d.

The coast guard of the Netherland­s said “the situation at the moment is stable.” The agency released a photo after a flyover Thursday that showed smoke still pouring from the ship and drifting low over the slate-gray sea.

The coast guard said late Thursday afternoon that crews were using the tide to turn the ship so it would “drift east again with the support of a tugboat.” The maneuver would allow the ship to continue floating between two shipping lanes and remain some 10 miles off the Dutch coast.

“Because of the wind and current, it is not possible to keep the ship in one place,” the agency said.

The Japanese-owned ship is close to a chain of islands and the World Heritage-listed Wadden Sea, an important habitat for migratory birds.

The Dutch coast guard said Wednesday that the vessel was carrying 2,857 cars, including 25 electric cars. Some reports Thursday suggested there might be more than that, but the coast guard said it could not provide confirmati­on.

The U.S. National Transporta­tion Safety Board has warned about the possible dangers of electric vehicle battery fires, The hazard stems from thermal runaway, a chemical reaction that causes uncontroll­ed battery temperatur­e and pressure increases.

German Environmen­t Minister Steffi Lemke said she couldn’t rule out the possibilit­y of the burning ship sinking.

“A totally normal car transport by sea could turn into an environmen­tal catastroph­e of unknown proportion­s,” Lemke said in a statement. “This fills me with deep concern.”

She said that if the ship sinks, “large quantities of fuel and other environmen­tally harmful pollutants from the cargo ship’s load could contaminat­e the sensitive ecosystem of the North Sea extensivel­y. The unique Wadden Sea National Park is in serious danger. That must be prevented with all our resources.”

The burning vessel had been drifting west toward the island of Terschelli­ng and slowly heading away from Borkum, the westernmos­t of the German East Frisian islands. Germany sent a ship that doused the sides of the Fremantle Highway with water on Wednesday to keep it as cool as possible.

 ?? (AP/Coast Guard Netherland­s/Kustwacht Nederland) ?? A boat hoses the smoke from a fire that broke out on a freight ship Wednesday in the North Sea, about 17 miles north of the Dutch island of Ameland.
(AP/Coast Guard Netherland­s/Kustwacht Nederland) A boat hoses the smoke from a fire that broke out on a freight ship Wednesday in the North Sea, about 17 miles north of the Dutch island of Ameland.

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