Senators
prodded Coast Guard to reconsider demolishing Polar Sea.
SEATTLE -- The
Coast Guard has postponed plans to scrap the Seattle-based icebreaker Polar Sea
this year.
Coast Guard
Commandant Adm. Robert Papp made the decision Thursday after meeting with Sens.
Maria Cantwell of Washington and Mark Begich and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, the
senators said Friday.
"The Polar
Sea's hull is still in sound condition," Cantwell said. "Postponing
its scrapping allows the administration and Congress more time to consider all
options for fulfilling the nation's critical icebreaking missions."
The United States
needs more icebreakers in the Arctic, the Alaska senators said.
"While this
may only be a six-month respite for the Polar Sea, I will use this period to
work through my role on the Appropriations Committee to make America's
icebreaking capacity a top priority," Murkowski said.
The 399-foot Polar
Sea is 35 years old and has been out of service since an engine failure in
2010. It had been scheduled to be dry-docked on Monday for the first steps in
demolition.
Its 36-year-old
sister ship, the Polar Star, has been on caretaker status since 2006 and is
undergoing a $57 million upgrade. The rehabbed Polar Star is expected to return
to service next year.
The United States
currently has only one working icebreaker, the Healy. It was used last winter
to escort a Russian tanker to Nome for an emergency fuel delivery after a fuel
barge failed to arrive before the Bering Sea froze.
The Healy is a
medium-duty icebreaker designed to crush ice about 5 feet thick. The Polar Sea
is designed to break through ice up to 21 feet thick.
One Coast Guard
study determined the agency and the Navy need six heavy duty icebreakers and
four medium icebreakers, the senators said. The reduction in Arctic ice has
created more opportunities for Northwest Passage trade, fishing and oil
exploration, as well as more environmental and security concerns. The
icebreakers also travel to Antarctica to resupply McMurdo Station.
The hull is the
costliest part of an icebreaker to build, said Brian Baird, a former Washington
congressman who is now vice president of Vigor Industrial, formerly Todd
Shipyards, which repairs the icebreakers. Building a new icebreaker could take
10 years and cost more than $800 million, Baird told The Seattle Times.
Source:
Anchorage daily News. 15 June 2012
http://www.adn.com/2012/06/15/2506218/coast-guard-to-keep-seattle-based.html
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