Hanjin Pennsylvania

11/11/2002
Indian Ocean

Freshly delivered by a south Korean shipyard, the Liberian container ship Hanjin Pennsylvania was on her way to Hamburg (Germany). On 11 November 2002, 150 km south of the Sri Lankan coast, a fire began in the hold. Containers with phosphorus and fireworks caught fire and exploded.

A huge fire forced the crew to abandon the ship and 2 men died in this accident. The Hanjin Pennsylvania was towed to a port to discharge the containers and then sold to breakers since the rebuilding costs would be more expensive. Nevertheless, the hull was bought by a British company which contracted with a Chinese shipyard to have the ship completely rebuilt. The new version of Hanjin Pennsylvania is now sailing as the Norasia Bellatrix.

Experts suggested the likely cause of the explosion was not a container full of fireworks. Indeed, according to the managing company Hanjin Shipping, the fire was understood to have started below deck and the fireworks were supposed to be carried on deck. The similarity of the explosions and fire onboard Hanjin Pennsylvania present a resemblance to accidents where a commodity known as calcium hypochorite has been identified as the main cause, like in the CMA Djakarta case.

Fire onboard Hanjin Pennsylvania
Fire onboard Hanjin Pennsylvania

Sources:

-International Longshoremans Wharehouse Union Local 13
-Cargolaw
-WellandCanal.ca

Pour en savoir plus

CIIMAR database:  fate and weathering of Hazardous and Noxious Substances (HNS) involved

Spill areaOpen sea
Pollutant typephosphorus and fireworks
Construction year2002
Length281.5 m
Width32.2 m
FlagLiberian
OwnerReederei F Laeisz GmbH, Allemagne

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