The Capital

Cezanne, sister ship to Dali, still sailing seas

- By Alex Mann Baltimore Sun reporter Hayes Gardner contribute­d to this article.

As the massive cargo ship that downed Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge last month navigated the globe, its sister ship was never too far away.

The Dali, a 984-foot, Singapore-flagged vessel, apparently lost power while departing the Port of Baltimore early in the morning March 26 and smashed into one of the Key Bridge’s main support piers, immediatel­y collapsing the span and sending six constructi­on workers plunging to their deaths.

Its sister ship, the Cezanne, which also is registered in Singapore, departed Baltimore 10 days earlier en route to the Sri Lankan capital Colombo, according to several vessel tracking websites. It’s scheduled to arrive there Monday.

Over its seafaring life, the Cezanne has been cited for many more “deficienci­es” than the Dali during port inspection­s, but neither ship had one so significan­t that it was prevented from sailing.

“I don’t think there’s any red flags there at all,” former merchant mariner Sal Mercoglian­o, who reviewed the ships’ inspection histories, told The Baltimore Sun. “Ships will get caught for typically minor infraction­s.”

Like the Dali, the Cezanne operates in an around-theworld container service offered by the Danish shipping giant Maersk that goes from Colombo to a port in Malaysia, four ports in China and one in South Korea before crossing the Pacific Ocean to transit the Panama Canal. From there it calls in Newark, New Jersey, and Norfolk, Virginia, before coming up the Chesapeake Bay to Baltimore. That voyage takes roughly eight weeks.

The Cezanne is next due in Baltimore June 8, its schedule on Maersk’s website says.

Maersk doesn’t own the two ships but leases them. The Dali and Cezanne are owned by different companies that list the same Singapore

address and both are managed by Synergy Marine Pte. Ltd., also from Singapore.

The South Korean manufactur­er Hyundai built the ships two months apart in 2015 in the same shipyard. They are approximat­ely the same weight and length and feature the same main engine and generators.

Both vessels have a capacity to carry 9,971 20-foot equivalent units of containers. Such units offer a way to measure the truck-sized metal boxes that now carry most global cargo, but range in size from a typical 40 feet, to as little as 20 feet and and long as 53 feet.

The Japanese ship classifica­tion society Nippon Kaiji Kyokai establishe­d standards for the vessels’ constructi­on and operation. The classifica­tion society conducts safety surveys every few years, for insurance purposes, and both ships passed their most recent reviews.

Neither the Singapore flag nor the Dali and Cezanne’s classifica­tion society were listed as medium or high risk by the Coast Guard in its 2023 annual report on ship inspection­s.

Each time a vessel makes a port call, the port nation can inspect it. The port can “detain” a ship if it notices a significan­t issue during inspection.

Per the Coast Guard, the Singapore flag had a detention ratio of 0.32%, while the ships’ classifica­tion society had a 0.05% ratio. The Coast Guard’s overall annual detention ratio was 1.22% in 2023, the report said.

The Dali has faced at least 27 such inspection­s around the world since it was completed in 2015, according to the website Equasis, which maintains data on ships. It was twice cited for “deficienci­es” but never detained. The Dali’s most recent deficiency was recognized during a June 2023 inspection at the port in San Antonio, Chile.

During an “initial inspection,” inspectors flagged a problem categorize­d under “propulsion and auxiliary machinery,” noting a deficiency with Dali’s “gauges, thermomete­rs, etc.,” Equasis data shows. Inspectors did not detain the ship, and the Dali later called in New York, where it passed a “standard examinatio­n” by the Coast Guard last September.

Mercoglian­o described the Dali’s latest deficiency as “really minor” in an interview days after the Key Bridge collapse.

“That’s pretty typical, to tell you the truth,” Mercoglian­o said in March. “Ships will get dinged all the time for it. The big thing is the ship had an inspection in September up in New York by the Coast Guard and there was not anything there.”

The Cezanne faced 24 inspection­s over the same time period as the Dali, and was cited by various ports for 11 deficienci­es, according to Equasis. None of those deficienci­es were categorize­d as propulsion problems, nor was the ship ever detained, but several pertained to safe operation of the vessel.

“There was nothing that jumped out to me that this was a major, mechanical issue,” Mercoglian­o said Thursday. “It’s pretty typical in the wear and tear of a ship.”

It was cited in Hong Kong in 2015 and 2018 for lack of “establishm­ent of working language onboard.” In October 2018, after the Hong Kong inspection, the vessel was cited in a South African port for a lack of “specific plans for the recovery of persons from the water.”

On Jan. 15, 2019, while Cezanne was sailing near Sri Lanka, the crew’s third officer didn’t report to the bridge for a shift, according to a 2020 report by the Singapore Ministry of Transport’s Transport Safety Investigat­ion Bureau. Authoritie­s in Singapore concluded that the officer had likely fallen overboard and it was “deemed probable” they were not wearing a personal flotation device.

The Cezanne was cited for five deficienci­es in China’s Port of Shenzhen in January 2019, following the disappeara­nce of the third officer, Equasis data shows.

Its latest citation came during a July 20 inspection at the Port of Qingdao in China, with the deficiency described as “lights, shapes and sound signal.”

Less than a month later, the Cezanne passed an inspection by the Coast Guard in California.

 ?? THE POST AND COURIER
BRAD NETTLES/ ?? The container ship Cezanne makes its way through Charleston Harbor past fisherman as it heads to the South Carolina Ports terminal in 2012.
THE POST AND COURIER BRAD NETTLES/ The container ship Cezanne makes its way through Charleston Harbor past fisherman as it heads to the South Carolina Ports terminal in 2012.

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