San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FIRE ERUPTS ON SHIP CARRYING BATTERIES

Officials: Two tons of lithium-ion batteries in two cargo holds

- BY REBECCA CARBALLO

Authoritie­s on Saturday continued to assess how to fight a fire that broke out two days ago aboard a cargo ship that is carrying nearly 2,000 tons of lithium-ion batteries and was ordered to remain off the Alaskan coast.

The U.S. Coast Guard said there were no injuries to the 19 crew members aboard the vessel, Genius Star XI, and that it remained seaworthy.

The exact cause of the fire was not known and remains under investigat­ion. The Coast Guard was not immediatel­y able to confirm who owns the vessel or say what other cargo it is carrying. The ship’s point of origin and destinatio­n were unavailabl­e.

The fire broke out in cargo holds where lithiumion batteries, which contain highly flammable materials, were being stored.

“These are very hot, very energetic fires,” said Richard

Burke, a professor of naval architectu­re and marine engineerin­g at the State University of New York Maritime College. Such fires can be long-lasting and difficult to put out, he added.

The Coast Guard ordered the vessel to remain 2 miles offshore from Dutch Harbor, Alaska, and officials establishe­d a 1-mile safety zone around the vessel for the duration of the response effort.

A fire occurred in two separate cargo holds, said Lt. Cmdr. Michael Salerno, a spokespers­on for the 17th Coast Guard District, which covers 47,300 miles of shoreline throughout Alaska and the Arctic.

Firefighti­ng systems on the vessel extinguish­ed one of the fires. Members of the crew sealed off the other cargo hold and were taking temperatur­e readings, which were normal as of Saturday, Salerno said.

There were no signs of heat damage outside the cargo hold, and authoritie­s plan to monitor the temperatur­e to see whether it continues to go down.

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