Firefighters are again battling flames aboard a fully loaded oil supertanker off Sri Lanka, the island's nation's navy said on Monday, four days after fire first broke out on the New Diamond.
"Fresh flames have risen in the funnel section of the MT New Diamond Supertanker and firefighters are battling the fire using foam to contain the blaze," said the Navy spokesman Captain Indika de Silva, adding that the fire had not reached the oil cargo of around 2 million barrels.
A fire first broke out last Thursday in the engine room and spread to the bridge of the very large crude carrier, chartered by Indian Oil Corp for importing oil from Kuwait. That blaze was doused on Sunday.
Tugs had been spraying water onto the ship on Monday to keep the metal cool, but high winds ignited the flames once again, de Silva said.
"We are spraying water on to the ship to keep it cool as there are several small fires still burning," he said.
Several tugboats surrounding the Very Large Crude Carrier (VLCC) are keeping it about 30 nautical miles, or about 58 km, east of Sangaman point - Sri Lanka’s easternmost point in the Ampara district.
The supertanker is adrift and has to be held in position by the tugboats.
Salvage operations are expected to begin shortly, but "the ship will be allowed to be moved out of Sri Lankan waters only with our permission", de Silva said.
(Reporting by Arjuna Ranawana Editing by Gareth Jones)
AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week