Showing posts with label Cruise Ship Costa Concordia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cruise Ship Costa Concordia. Show all posts

22 May 2012

Gallery: How Consta Concordia will be refloated for scrap in biggest-ever operation:


The “unprecedented” operation to refloat and remove the sunken Costa Concordia cruise ship will be the most ambitious effort of its kind ever attempted and will cost at least $300-million, it was disclosed Friday.

See a gallery of images detailing the operation to refloat the Costa Concordia
The operation is due to start in the next few days and is expected to take a year, with the ship to be towed to an Italian port and then dismantled for scrap.

“This is the largest ship removal by weight in history,” said Richard Habib, president of Titan Salvage, the American company that will raise the 1,000ft-long, 114,500-ton cruise liner.

“The magnitude of the job is unprecedented. But we feel confident that we can do it and do it safely, with the least disturbance to the environment and the economy of Giglio.”

The Concordia has been wedged on rocks and semi-submerged a few yards off the coast of Giglio, an island off Tuscany, ever since it ran aground on January 13. During the panic-stricken evacuation of its 4,200 passengers and crew, 32 people lost their lives.

Thirty bodies have been recovered but the remains of two people - an Indian and an Italian - are still missing and may be inside the wreck.

Its captain, Francesco Schettino, is under house arrest and has been accused of sailing the ship too close to Giglio, smashing it into a rocky reef and tearing a huge gash in its hull. He faces charges of manslaughter and of deserting the ship well before the evacuation had been completed. The next court hearing in the case is set for July.

The scale of the ship’s removal is “gigantic”, said Silvio Bartolotti, the manager of Micoperi, an Italian marine contractor that will collaborate with Titan.

The plan for removing the wreck involves extracting the huge chunk of rock embedded in its side and patching up the torn hull. Engineers and divers will then construct a platform beneath the ship and fix steel compartments or “caissons” to the side of the liner that is out of the water.

Two cranes will pull the ship upright so that it rests on the submerged platform. The caissons will be filled with water to help the cranes lift the massive weight.

Once the vessel is upright, more chambers will be attached to the other side of the hull. All the caissons will then be filled with air, which will stabilise the ship in preparation for it being towed to a nearby port for demolition.

Captain Habib conceded that the operation entailed significant risks and said if it went wrong there was no “plan B”.

“There are two critical stages - to roll the vessel on to the platform and then to safely refloat it. We think our plan is going to work and that we will be successful,” he said.

Costa Cruises, the Italian owners of the cruise liner, said the operation, “the likes of which have never been attempted,” would cost at least $300? million.

Source: The Telegraph. By Nick Squires. 18 May 2012
http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/Gallery+Consta+Concordia+will+refloated+scrap+biggest+ever+operation/6645149/story.html
 

Costa Concordia - ready to float the boat:

Salvage experts plan to use water-filled cisterns to weigh down the above-sea side of the Costa Concordia that capsized off the Italian coast. It is part of an effort to turn the massive vessel upright so it can towed for demolition early next year. One official called the operation's magnitude "unprecedented".

The Costa Concordia, which was carrying 4200 people, struck a jagged reef the night of January 13 when it veered too close to the coast of tiny Giglio island. Gashed on one side, the ship began listing badly and came to rest on its side on the rocky seabed off the Tuscan shore. The accident killed 32 people.

Titan Salvage, a company based in Pompano Beach, Florida, won the bid to remove the Concordia's wreckage, which now lies in pristine waters.

Captain Richard Habib, Titan Salvage's managing director, said the goal is to "use brains, [and] not as much brawn" to remove the Concordia without having it slip into much deeper water. He said the biggest challenge in the operation is to roll the vessel upright on a platform and to safely float it away to a port yet to be selected by Italian officials.

"The magnitude of the job is something unprecedented," Habib said.

The plan involves constructing an underwater platform and attaching empty cisterns to the above-water side of the ship. Then the cisterns will be filled with water, and two cranes attached to the platform will pull the ship upright. Once upright, the ship will have cisterns attached to the other side. Then all the cisterns will be emptied of water before being filled with air to help the ship rise higher in the water and free itself of the seabed. Once it is properly afloat, the ship can be towed to a port for demolition.

Habib said the ship would weigh 45,000 tonnes without the filled cisterns. The goal is to have it upright by the start of winter and to start towing it early next year, he said.

Experts at the news conference said some holes in the ship will have to be repaired before towing to make sure the vessel can float. The gash caused by the collision with the reef is dozens of metres long, but several holes were also blasted into the wreckage so divers could swim in to search for bodies.

While nothing similar on such a scale has been tried before, Habib said, "we think our plan is going to work".

He declined to say if there was a "Plan B" if the strategy fails. The Italian captain of the Concordia is under house arrest while prosecutors investigate him for possible manslaughter and abandoning ship while the evacuation was still underway.

Prosecutors contend that the captain steered the ship dangerously close to the island in a publicity stunt, although the captain insists the reef didn't appear on navigational charts.

Source: NZ Herald. 20 May 2012
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10807060

13 March 2012

6 bids launched for salvage operation to remove Costa cruise ship from Tuscan coast

ROME — The Italian owners of the Costa Concordia cruise ship that capsized off the Tuscan coast are considering six proposals to remove the vessel — a yearlong operation that may involve breaking it up.

Costa Crociere SpA said in a statement Friday that each plan submitted for bidding consideration envisages a 10-12 month salvage operation. And each proposal focuses on ensuring the least environmental impact around the tiny island of Giglio, which is in a marine sanctuary, Costa said.

The Concordia slammed into a reef off Giglio Jan. 13 after the captain veered off course and steered the liner close to port in an apparent stunt. Twenty-five people were killed and seven others are missing and presumed dead following a hectic and delayed evacuation.

Costa, a unit of Miami-based cruise company Carnival Corp., released few details of the six competing bids, saying only that some of the plans may involve removing some external parts of the ship. That would allow for the hull to be more easily dislodged from the rocks where it is currently perched, Costa said.

Experts have expressed doubt that such a huge liner can be simply re-floated and removed intact. But cutting up the ship raises serious environmental concerns for the pristine waters around Giglio, which is heavily dependent on tourism.

The winning bid is expected to be announced later this month or next.

Removal of the ship cannot begin until all 500,000 gallons of fuel have been extracted from the ship’s tanks. That pumping operation, which has been under way for several weeks, was hampered Friday by poor weather, civil protection officials said.

The Dutch salvage firm Smit has been handling the fuel extraction, and spokesman Martijn Schuttevaer confirmed the company had submitted one of the 6 bids to remove the wreck.

The Concordia’s captain, Francesco Schettino, is under house arrest and accused of manslaughter, causing a shipwreck and abandoning the ship before all 4,200 passengers and crew were evacuated. He has denied the charges and insisted the reefs, which are on most tourist maps, weren’t on his nautical charts.

Source: Associated Press. 10 March 2012
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/6-bids-launched-for-salvage-operation-to-remove-costa-cruise-ship-from-tuscan-coast/2012/03/09/gIQAgBqb1R_story.html

28 January 2012

Salvagers face major challenges in recovering half-sunk cruise ship:

The Costa Concordia lies on its side outside the harbour of Giglio Island. It's the largest liner ever wrecked and salvage costs are estimated at $50 million.
Photograph by: Darrin Zammit Lupi, Reuters, Reuters
Options for Costa Concordia include scrapping, refloating or sinking

Twice the size of the Titanic and three times the length of a soccer pitch; the cruise ship Costa Concordia conjures up superlatives even as a wreck.

Fitted out with sumptuous spas, enormous ballrooms and a Formula One race car simulator for its 3,000 passengers, it cruised around the Mediterranean with the equivalent of a small town on board.

Now half-submerged off the coast of Tuscany like an office block that has keeled over, the Costa Concordia could cost the insurance industry up to $1 billion, making this the biggest-ever shipping loss for insurers.

And for the salvagers - maritime scavengers who are preparing to bid for the business of either making it shipshape again, or dismembering it for scrap, or even sending it to the bottom - the Costa Concordia poses one of the most daunting recovery tasks ever tackled.

At 290 metres long and 36 metres wide, the ship has a gross tonnage - describing the volume and size of the vessel - of 114,500 tonnes, and an estimated weight ranging from 25,000 to 45,000 tonnes.

But half-submerged and tipped on its side, it is now much heavier because it is full of water and wet furnishings, from soggy mattresses, carpets and clothes to waterlogged chairs and sofas. And it is perched perilously close to a sea cliff on rocks that in the worst-case scenario could crumble or collapse under the enormous weight.

All of which means that the owners of the crippled cruise ship will have to decide whether it makes more sense financially to refloat it or to chop it into pieces which can be sold for scrap, or simply sink it off the coast.

FUEL REMOVAL TAKES A MONTH

"This has not happened with other passenger ships," said Mike Lacey of the International Salvage Union, the sector's trade association. "There have been large bulk carriers or large tankers that were stranded but not a type such as this one."

Guesstimates for the cost of salvaging the ship are in the region of $50 million or more. On top of that cost, if the exterior can be rescued, the ship's owners will need to refit the Costa Concordia from scratch because its interiors are no longer usable.

When a big ship runs into trouble, one of the first things the salvagers do is remove the fuel, so that it does not leak and cause an environmental disaster, before they can even start work on moving the vessel.

The Costa Concordia carries 2,300 tonnes of diesel oil, stored in 17 tanks, some of which are the size of a house. The salvager typically cuts 2 or 3 holes in each tank, and makes a valve for each one, using a circular-shaped saw, said Hans van Rooij, a consultant at Dutch firm Global Marine Solutions, and a former director of SMIT Salvage.

One hole is used to remove the oil, another to let air or water in so that a vacuum does not form. A 3rd hole can be used to pass in steam and warm up the oil: submerged in the cold water, the oil thickens and has to be heated so it can be pumped out easily.

SMIT is preparing to remove the cruise ship's oil starting today, a pro-cess which will take about a month.

With 30 or so years of experience in the industry, Van Rooij has worked on several disasters, including the lifting of the Herald of Free Enterprise, the British car ferry that capsized in 1987 near the Belgian coast, killing 193 people.

The ferry capsized because its car ramp doors had not been closed properly. It lay in a similar position to that of the Costa Concordia now, and was salvaged using piles to pull it upright. SMIT - part of Dutch group Royal Boskalis Westminster, the world's largest dredger - has a 170-year history of piloting, towing, and salvaging ships.

Thanks partly to its history as a maritime power in the 17th century and its strategic position on the coast, the Netherlands boasts some of the world's leading companies in maritime services.

SMIT is one of the world's leading salvage firms, while Dutch heavy lifting firm Mammoet also has salvage operations.

Together, SMIT and Mammoet successfully lifted the Russian nuclear sub-marine Kursk from the bottom of the Barents Sea, where it sank in 2000 with 118 men to a depth of 108 metres.

Both companies are expected to bid for the salvaging operation of the Costa Concordia.

Even before the oil is pumped out, salvagers must have a clear idea of the underwater landscape. The big unknown in this case is whether the rocks where the Costa Concordia is precariously balanced are strong enough to take the additional burden or strain of equipment needed to right it.

Salvagers need to know whether the ship can be righted, and to do that, they need be able to set up pontoons or plat-forms, cables and gigantic anchors that are strong enough to support such a ship as it is pulled upright.

"The weight is a problem. You need external forces, which could be as much as 10,000 tonnes. Then you have the problem of anchoring these forces," Van Rooij said.

But salvagers say they do not know whether the rocks on this stretch of craggy coastline - the rocks which cost at least 16 lives when the ship turned to perform a salute to the island of Giglio and was brutally gored - are strong enough to support the ship as it is pulled off its side.

For example, salvagers typically need room to set 2 pontoons in place and to use both of those to slowly pull the ship upright.

To get a better understanding of the rocks, seismic experts and divers, as well as submarine equipment, may need to survey the rock bed where Costa Concordia is lying.

"You want to know the shape of the sea bed. What kind of soil is it - sand or rock? If you want to anchor some-thing, you need to know how strong it is," Van Rooij said.

ASSESSING POSITION

Salvagers need to know where the ship is damaged, how stable it is in the position where it is lying, how it was built and what was on board.

Costa Concordia was carrying more than 4,000 passengers and crew when it ran aground - and a lot more besides.

The ship was a 13-deck pleasure pal-ace kitted out with vast restaurants, a 3-storey high theatre, and an enormous spa.

Elsewhere on board, passengers could jog along the top deck running track, splash around in the pools, play on the water slides and even indulge in the thrill of some fantasy motor racing thanks to an F1 simulator.

Public spaces were named after European cities - Berlin, Stockholm, Paris and others - and brightly decorated, while each deck was named after a European country with the Netherlands at the bottom and Austria at the top.

SHIP FULL OF EXTRA WEIGHT

The European Union served as the central motif for fashioning the Costa Concordia's interior, the ship's designer said.

"On this ship, the idea was for each public room to take a style that was evocative of every country in Europe, in the European Union," veteran Miami architect Joe Farcus told Reuters in an interview.

As one guest commented on a travel website: "the cabins were beautiful, but the decorations of the boat else-where [some restaurants, deck 9] were a little bit too much plingpling."

With all those fittings, bling-bling or otherwise, the ship is full of extra weight, making the task of salvaging trickier.

"There were more than 4,000 people on board, all carrying luggage and adding weight. If you want to salvage you need to take this into account," Van Rooij said.

He estimated the ship's weight at 45,000 tonnes, excluding luggage, food, and water.

"The accommodation will absorb a lot of water, which also adds weight. Every mattress soaks up water, the carpets do too."

For divers searching the wreck for the last remaining bodies this is difficult work, with chairs and tables, curtains and deck loungers all bobbing around within the dark confines of the ship.

RAISING OPTIONS CONSIDERED

"In the ship everything is floating - curtains, waste. The orientation is also different. Doors have fallen open, chairs are everywhere, it's chaos and everything is dark," Van Rooij said. "A diver has a light on his helmet but he has to work very carefully and make sure there is a route back, that nothing falls and blocks the path."

Pier Luigi Foschi, the head of the ship's owner Costa Cruises, said last week that removing the ship from its resting place would be "one of the most difficult things in the world."

Salvaging is difficult because of its size - this is the biggest liner ever wrecked - and its position on a cliff underwater. If the ship slides off, it could sink in 60 metres of water.

One expert said the ship could possibly be refloated using giant balloons.

"We're here to look at how it can be raised," a salvage expert from Titan Salvage said. "It could definitely be done, with balloons, cables. There are various techniques."

But others said that would be impossible because the vessel's interior is divided into hundreds of cabins, so there would not be enough room to inflate several very large balloons.

"If you have big spaces in a ship you could do it. But this is a cruise ship with many compartments, halls and cabins. It doesn't work," Van Rooij said.

It would also be difficult to find an anchor point to lift the ship because the sea bed slopes to a depth of 60 metres on one side, he said.

"1st, you have to see if the ship is strong enough to be pulled. 2ndly, you have to anchor the equipment with which you will pull, for instance poles in a sea bed," he said.

A cruise ship's hull is strongly built but most of the decks are made of lightweight steel or aluminum.

"The Costa Concordia has been damaged and is lying slanted in such a way that will be very difficult to refloat. A container ship is much more strongly built, unlike a cruise ship, of which the top is less strong," said Peter Tromp, manager at Dutch wreck removal company Euro Demolition.

PROCESS COULD TAKE 2 YEARS!!

It would also be difficult to prevent the ship from being dragged instead of turned when pulling it. The ship needs a pivotal point which is able to withstand strong force.

Van Rooij said that if one anchor can hold 200 to 300 tonnes, a 45,000-tonne ship would require at least 150 anchors for support, making it impractical to work around it.

The alternative, and one that Euro Demolition thinks is the more likely option, is a carve-up.

Euro Demolition is cutting up the 109-metre cargo ship TK Bremen which ran aground off the northwest-ern Brittany coast last month in heavy storms.

"We work with big shears to cut it into pieces. It is also possible to saw the ship," said Tromp of Euro Demolition.

To saw a ship into pieces, a big chain with sharp, hardened cutting edges is moved like a saw over the metal. But even this could prove difficult in the case of the Costa Concordia because the ship is close to the coast.

"Normally you saw between 2 floating pontoons but here there is only room for one because there is land on the other side," Tromp said.

While the ship's steel could be sold as scrap, all the interior fittings - the computers, chairs, carpets - are ruined and cannot be reused, so they will have to be removed and disposed of properly - and that will cost money.

Van Rooij said removing the ship and its contents would cost dozens of millions of euros but he could not give an estimate.

The salvaging of the Tricolor, a ship that was carrying nearly 3,000 cars when it sank in the English Channel in December 2002, cost $50 million, Van Rooij said, and was finished in the 2nd half of 2004.

But clearing the Costa Concordia from the site could take up to 2 years, depending on whether it was refloated or cut up.

"The Tricolor took 2 seasons, including a winter. Here it will be milder but there is still a winter in the Mediterranean Sea."

If cutting the ship into pieces is too difficult, there is always a 3rd, but very unlikely, option: dumping the ship on the bottom of the sea.

"I don't think the Italian authorities will allow this," said Lacey of the International Salvage Union.

As it awaits it fate, the ship may turn out to be a tourist attraction.

Source: Reuters. By Gilbert Kreijger. 28 January 2012 

27 January 2012

Costa Concordia dilemma: salvage, cut, or sink?

Cruise Ship Costa Concordia
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Twice the size of the Titanic and three times the length of a soccer pitch, the cruise ship Costa Concordia conjures up superlatives even as a wreck.

Fitted out with sumptuous spas, enormous ballrooms and a Formula 1 race car simulator for its 3,000 passengers, it cruised around the Mediterranean with the equivalent of a small town on board.
Now half-submerged off the coast of Tuscany like an office block that has keeled over, the Costa Concordia could cost the insurance industry up to $1 billion, making this the biggest-ever shipping loss for insurers.

And for the salvagers - maritime scavengers who are preparing to bid for the business of either making it shipshape again, or dismembering it for scrap, or even sending it to the bottom - the Costa Concordia poses one of the most daunting recovery tasks ever tackled.

At 290 meters long and 36 meters wide, the ship has a gross tonnage - describing the volume and size of the vessel - of 114,500 tonnes, and an estimated actual weight ranging from 25,000 to 45,000 tonnes.

But half-submerged and tipped on its side, it is now much heavier because it is full of water and furnishings, from soggy mattresses, carpets and clothes to water-logged chairs and sofas. And it is perched perilously close to a sea cliff on rocks that in the worst-case scenario could crumble or collapse under the enormous weight.

All of which means that the owners of the crippled cruise ship will have to weigh up whether it makes more sense financially to refloat it or to chop it into pieces which can be sold for scrap, or simply sink it off the coast, given the technical difficulties involved.

"This has not happened with other passenger ships," said Mike Lacey of the International Salvage Union, the sector's trade association. "There have been large bulk carriers or large tankers that were stranded but not a type such as this one."

Guesstimates for the cost of salvaging the ship are in the region of $50 million or more. On top of that cost, if the exterior can be rescued, the ship's owners will need to refit the Costa Concordia from scratch because its interiors are no longer usable.

HOUSE-SIZED FUEL TANKS

When a big ship runs into trouble, one of the first things the salvagers do is remove the fuel, so that it does not leak and cause an environmental disaster, before they can even start work on moving the vessel.

The Costa Concordia carries 2,300 tonnes of diesel oil, stored in 17 tanks, some of which are the size of a house.

The salvager typically cuts two or three holes in each tank, and makes a valve for each one, using a circular-shaped saw, said Hans van Rooij, a consultant at Dutch firm Global Marine Solutions, and a former director of SMIT Salvage.

One hole is used to remove the oil, another to let air or water in so that a vacuum does not form. A third hole can be used to pass in steam and warm up the oil: submerged in the cold water, the oil thickens and has to be heated so it can be pumped out easily.

SMIT is currently preparing to remove the cruise ship's oil, a process which will take about a month.

With 30 or so years of experience in the industry, Van Rooij has worked on several disasters, including the lifting of the Herald of Free Enterprise, the British car ferry which capsized in 1987 near the Belgian coast, killing 193 people.

The ferry capsized because its doors had not been closed properly. It lay in a similar position to that of the Costa Concordia now, and was salvaged using piles to pull it upright.

SMIT - part of Dutch group Royal Boskalis Westminster, the world's largest dredger - has a 170-year history of piloting, towing, and salvaging ships.

Thanks partly to its history as a maritime power in the seventeenth century and its strategic position on the coast, the Netherlands boasts some of the world's leading companies in maritime services.

SMIT is one of the world's leading salvage firms, while Dutch heavy lifting firm Mammoet also has salvage operations.

Together, SMIT and Mammoet successfully lifted the Russian nuclear submarine Kursk from the bottom of the Barents Sea, where it sank with 118 men in 2000 to a depth of 108 meters.

Both companies are expected to bid for the salvaging operation of the Costa Concordia.

THE BIG UNKNOWN

Even before the oil is pumped out, salvagers must have a clear idea of the underwater landscape. The big unknown in this case is whether the rocks where the Costa Concordia is precariously balanced are strong enough to take the additional burden or strain of equipment needed to right it.

Salvagers need to know whether the ship can be righted, and to do that, they need be able to set up pontoons or platforms, cables and gigantic anchors which are strong enough to support such a ship as it is pulled upright again.

"The weight is a problem. You need external forces, which could be as much as 10,000 tonnes. Then you have the problem of anchoring these forces," Van Rooij said.

But salvagers say they do not know whether the rocks on this stretch of craggy coastline - the rocks which cost at least 16 lives when the ship turned to perform a salute to the island of Giglio and was brutally gored - are strong enough to support the ship as it is pulled off its side.

For example, salvagers typically need room to set two pontoons in place and to use both of those to slowly pull the ship upright.

To get a better understanding of the rocks, seismic experts and divers, as well as submarine equipment, may need to survey the rock bed where Costa Concordia is lying.

"You want to know the shape of the sea bed. What kind of soil is it - sand or rock? If you want to anchor something, you need to know how strong it is," Van Rooij said.

Salvagers need to know where the ship is damaged, how stable it is in the position where it is lying, how it was built and what was on board.

FRILLS & THRILLS

Costa Concordia was carrying more than 4,000 passengers and crew when it ran aground - and a lot more besides.

The ship was a 13-deck pleasure palace kitted out with vast restaurants, a three-storey high theatre, and an enormous spa.

"The Samsara Spa itself is one of the great draws of the Costa Concordia," according to its publicity material.

"Asian-inspired and specializing in thalassotherapy - treatments that use seawater, marine mud, and other oceanic elements - it spans over 20,000 square feet. Tried-and-true therapies abound as well, from massages and facials to soaks and saunas."

Elsewhere on board, passengers could jog along the top deck running track, splash around in the pools, play on the water slides and even indulge in the thrill of some fantasy motor racing thanks to a Formula 1 simulator.

Public spaces were named after European cities - Berlin, Stockholm, Paris and others - and brightly decorated, while each deck was named after a European country with the Netherlands at the bottom and Austria at the top.

The European Union served as the central motif for fashioning the Costa Concordia's interior, the ship's designer said.

"On this ship, the idea was for each public room to take a style that was evocative of every country in Europe, in the European Union," veteran Miami architect Joe Farcus told Reuters in an interview.

As one guest commented on a travel website: "the cabins were beautiful, but the decorations of the boat elsewhere (some restaurants, deck 9) were a little bit too much plingpling."

With all those fittings, blingbling or otherwise, the ship is full of extra weight, making the task of salvaging trickier.

"There were more than 4,000 people on board, all carrying luggage and adding weight. If you want to salvage you need to take this into account," Van Rooij said.

He estimated the ship's weight at 45,000 tonnes, excluding luggage, food, and water.

"The accommodation will absorb a lot of water, which also adds weight. Every mattress soaks up water, the carpets do too."

For divers searching the wreck for the last remaining bodies this is difficult work, with chairs and tables, curtains and deck loungers all bobbing around within the dark confines of the stricken ship.

"In the ship everything is floating - curtains, waste. The orientation is also different. Doors have fallen open, chairs are everywhere, it's chaos and everything is dark," Van Rooij said.

"A diver has a light on his helmet but he has to work very carefully and make sure there is a route back, that nothing falls and blocks the path."

BIG BALLOONS?

Pier Luigi Foschi, the head of the ship's owner Costa Cruises, said last week that removing the ship from its resting place would be "one of the most difficult things in the world."

Salvaging is difficult because of its size - this is the biggest liner ever wrecked - and its position on a cliff under water. If the ship slides off, it could sink 60 meters.

One expert that Reuters spoke to said the ship could possibly be refloated using giant balloons.

"We're here to look at how it can be raised," a salvage expert from Titan Salvage told Reuters, speaking anonymously.

"It could definitely be done, with balloons, cables. There are various techniques."

But others said that would be impossible because the vessel's interior is divided into hundreds of cabins, so there would not be enough room to inflate several very large balloons.

"If you have big spaces in a ship you could do it. But this is a cruise ship with many compartments, halls and cabins. It doesn't work," Van Rooij said.

It would also be difficult to find an anchor point to lift the ship because the sea bed slopes to a depth of 60 meters on one side, he said.

"First, you have to see if the ship is strong enough to be pulled. Secondly, you have to anchor the equipment with which you will pull, for instance poles in a sea bed," he said.

A cruise ship's hull is strongly built but most of the decks are made of lightweight steel or aluminum.

"The Costa Concordia has been damaged and is lying slanted in such a way that will be very difficult to refloat. A container ship is much more strongly built, unlike a cruise ship, of which the top is less strong," said Peter Tromp, manager at Dutch wreck removal company Euro Demolition.

It would also be difficult to prevent the ship from being dragged instead of turned when pulling it. The ship needs a pivotal point which is able to withstand strong force.

Van Rooij said that if one anchor can hold 200 to 300 tonnes, a 45,000-tonne ship would require at least 150 anchors for support, making it impractical to work around it.

CARVE-UP?

The alternative, and one that Euro Demolition thinks is the more likely option, is a carve-up.

Euro Demolition is currently cutting up the 109-metre cargo ship TK Bremen which ran aground off the northwestern Brittany coast last month in heavy storms.

"We work with big shears to cut it into pieces. It is also possible to saw the ship," said Tromp of Euro Demolition.

To saw a ship into pieces, a big chain with sharp, hardened cutting edges is moved like a saw over the metal. But even this could prove difficult in the case of the Costa Concordia because the ship is close to the coast.

"Normally you saw between two floating pontoons but here there is only room for one because there is land on the other side," Tromp said.

While the ship's steel could be sold as scrap, all the interior fittings - the computers, chairs, carpets - are ruined and cannot be reused, so they will have to be removed and disposed of properly - and that will cost money.

"A container ship is made entirely of steel but a cruise ship is a giant amusement park with televisions and other things. It's all in salt water and you have to throw it away. Dumping waste costs money," Tromp said.

Van Rooij said removing the ship and its contents would cost dozens of millions of euros but he could not give an estimate.

The salvaging of the Tricolor, a ship which was carrying nearly 3,000 cars when it sank in the English Channel in December 2002, cost $50 million, Van Rooij said, and was finished in the second half of 2004.

But clearing the Costa Concordia from the site could take up to two years, depending on whether it was refloated or cut up.

"The Tricolor took two seasons, including a winter. Here it will be milder but there is still a winter in the Mediterranean Sea. It can take up to two years," Van Rooij said, because in the winter, bad weather or rough seas can hamper work.

If cutting the ship into pieces is too difficult, there is always a third, but very unlikely, option: dumping the ship on the bottom of the sea.

"I don't think the Italian authorities will allow this," said Lacey of the International Salvage Union.

For now, as it awaits it fate, the ship may turn out to be a tourist attraction.

(Editing by Sara Webb and Giles Elgood)

Source: Reuters. By Gilbert Kreijger. 27 January 2012

24 January 2012

Another body discovered aboard toppled Concordia:

An Italian Navy officer talks on a walkie-talkie in the harbor of the Tuscan island of Giglio, Italy, where the cruise ship Costa Concordia run aground, Monday, Jan. 23, 2012. Salvage experts can begin pumping fuel from a capsized cruise ship as early as Tuesday to avert a possible environmental catastrophe and the ship is stable enough that search efforts for the missing can continue, Italian officials said. (AP Photo/Pier Paolo Cito) 
ROME—Officials say divers searching the toppled Costa Concordia have discovered another body in the submerged cruise ship.

The discovery on the third floor deck brings to 16 the number of bodies found since the Jan. 13 grounding. Officials at the Tuscan prefect's office said Tuesday they couldn't immediately confirm Italian news reports that the body was that of a woman.

The discovery was made as a large platform carrying a crane and other equipment hitched itself to the shipwreck, signaling the start of preliminary operations to remove a half-million gallons of fuel from the ship's tanks.

Actual pumping of the oil isn't expected to begin until Saturday, and will continue in tandem with search and rescue operations.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.


ROME (AP) -- A large platform carrying a crane and other equipment hitched itself to the toppled Costa Concordia on Tuesday, signaling the start of preliminary operations to remove a half-million gallons of fuel from the grounded cruise ship before it leaks into the pristine Tuscan sea.

Actual pumping of the oil isn't expected to begin until Saturday, but officials from the Dutch shipwreck salvage firm Smit were seen on the bow of the Concordia and in the waters nearby making preparations to remove the fuel.

Officials have identified an initial six tanks that will be tapped, located in a relatively easy-to-reach area of the ship. Franco Gabrielli, head of the national civil protection agency, told reporters Tuesday that once the tanks are emptied, 50 percent of the fuel aboard the ship will have been extracted.

The pumping will continue 24 hours a day barring rough seas or technical glitches in this initial phase, he said.

"This is a complicated operation," Gabrielli warned. Smit has estimated the extraction operation could last a month.

The Concordia ran aground and capsized off the Tuscan island of Giglio on Jan. 13 after the captain veered from his approved course and gashed the ship's hull on a reef, forcing the panicked evacuation of 4,200 passengers and crew.

So far 15 bodies have been found. Six of the badly decomposed bodies remain unidentified, and are presumed to be among some of the 17 passengers and crew still unaccounted for.

Divers, meanwhile, continued blasting holes inside the steel-hulled ship to ease access for crews searching for the missing. The search and rescue operation will continue in tandem with the fuel removal operation.

On Monday, islanders and officials spotted an oil film on the water about 300 meters (yards) from the wreck. Absorbent panels were put around the oil to soak up the substance and officials said Tuesday it was a very thin film that didn't present any significant levels of toxicity.

Giglio and its waters are part of a protected seven-island marine park, favored by VIPs and known for its clear waters and porpoises, dolphins and whales.

Gabrielli said he had formally asked Costa Crociere SpA, the owner of the Concordia, to come up with a plan for what to do with the innards of the ship that are floating away -- the tables and chairs and other furniture that are being hauled away by barge on a daily basis.

And he said he had asked provincial authorities to designate a site on the mainland where the material can be dumped.

Costa is a unit of Miami-based Carnival Corp., the world's biggest cruise operator.

It has blamed the captain, Francesco Schettino, for the disaster, saying he made an unauthorized and unapproved deviation from the route. Schettino remains under house arrest facing accusations of manslaughter, causing a shipwreck and abandoning the ship before all passengers were off.

Early Tuesday, amid continued outrage by passengers of the chaotic evacuation, Costa promised to refund the full cost of the cruise, reimburse all travel expenses to and from the ship, all on-board expenses and any medical expenses incurred as a result of the grounding.

"Every effort will be made to return the valuables left in the cabin safe," Costa said in a statement.

Source: BostonGlobe.com. 24 January 2012

23 January 2012

Costa Concordia death toll rises to twelve:

Searching the capsized Costa Concordia Saturday, Italian divers recovered a woman’s body, the twelfth fatality in last week’s cruise ship catastrophe.  Although more than twenty people are still missing, the Italian Coast Guard is growing eager to begin serious recovery operations before the massive liner slips from its precarious spot atop a coastal reef.  If the ship sinks deeper, recovery and salvage operations become considerably more complicated, and the risk of environmental disaster increases exponentially as seawater seeps into engines, fuel tanks, and other machinery.

Divers said they found the drowned woman, still wearing her life vest, trapped in a narrow hallway near one of the life-boat boarding stations.  In order to pass through the narrow passage, divers had to wait for Italian Navy under-water demolition experts to clear obstructions with small explosive charges.  Recovery divers reported they easily could see how the woman might have been trapped in rapidly shifting debris; and they speculated she may have been a crew member who let passengers board the life boat before her.  A female Peruvian bartender numbers among the missing.

Relatives of the missing persons joined the Coast Guard, imploring the 4000 people who evacuated the ship after it ran aground to share whatever information they may have about the twenty people still unaccounted for.  “We are asking the 4,000 persons who were on board to give any information they can about any of the persons still missing,” Alain Litzler, a Frenchman who is the father of missing passenger Mylene Litzler told the Associated Press on Friday. “We need precise information to help the search and rescue teams find them.”

Police divers find captain’s files.

Captain Francesco Schettino faces manslaughter charges and has come under fire for abandoning his ship very shortly after it capsized.  Authorities believe the ship ran aground on a perilously rocky reef as a result of Shettino’s reckless attempt to navigate well outside standard sea lanes to give his passengers an exceptionally close-up view of Giglio Island.  Shettino is under house arrest while police and maritime authorities review his conduct and management of the evacuation.
Early Saturday, police divers found and recovered the captain’s safe and two of his suitcases; other divers searching the bridge found a hard disk containing data about the voyage.  That hard disk will supplement findings from the ship’s two “black boxes” recovered earlier this week.  Other experienced captains familiar with the cruise ship’s course have described Shettino’s maneuver as “foolishly arrogant and just plain stupid.”

Divers have seen no indication that any of the half-million gallons of heavy fuel oil aboard Costa Concordia have leaked from their double-bottomed tanks, but authorities warn that the ship easily could hit more sharp rocks if it shifts and sinks deeper.  Therefore, they want to begin off-laoding fuel oil as soon as possible, and they have specialized equipment standing by.

Source: Nowt News. 23 January 2012