Germans Dislodge Grounded Freighter Amid Ecological Fears

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Railway operator Deutsche Bahn continued to deal with “significant damage” from downed trees on some rail routes. Service will be limited in parts of northern Germany, DB said, after being suspended in large parts of the north and center of the country on Sunday, stranding thousands of travelers.

In the North Sea, authorities were monitoring the “Glory Amsterdam,” a 225-metre (742-foot) freighter that foundered 2.2 km (1.36 miles) from the German island of Langeoog, for any signs of oil leaks, said Michael Friedrich, spokesman for Germany’s Central Command for Maritime Emergencies.

But plans to tow the freighter free during high tide on Monday were being revised after officials determined the waters were too shallow for the ship that would have done the towing, Friedrich said. Instead, workers would seek to lighten the ship’s load and use ships with shallower draft for towing.

“We’re working on a plan, but the towing will definitely not happen today,” he said. The freighter’s captain had reported all was well on board and the ship’s crew of 22 was safe.

The freighter was not carrying any cargo, Friedrich said. Concern about an oil leak centered on 1,800 tonnes of heavy oil and 140 tonnes of marine diesel the ship had on board for fuel.

The non-profit environmental group World Wildlife Fund said the oil on board continued to pose a significant risk to the Wadden Sea, a UNESCO World Heritage site, and renewed its call for a worldwide ban on heavy oil for use as ship fuel.

The Wadden Sea is the largest unbroken system of intertidal sand and mud flats in the world. Including sand banks, salt marshes and dunes, it stretches from the Netherlands to neighboring Germany and Denmark.

“Numerous wading birds, ducks and geese that are resting there at the moment would be endangered by the oil” if the ship broke up, Hans-Ulrich Rosenberg, a mud flat expert with WWE, said in a statement.

A group representing German cutter and coastal fishermen questioned whether authorities had done enough to protect coastal areas. “This wasn’t exactly the storm of the century, which raises the question of whether the protections in place are sufficient,” said Dirk Sander, head of the group.

Elsewhere in Germany, Deutsche Bahn said rail traffic on a number of key routes – including the heavily traveled line from Hamburg to Berlin – would resume on Monday afternoon.

Thousands of travelers were stranded on Sunday, with some seeking shelter in special sleeping cars provided at stations. Trains that resumed service on Monday were crammed so full that some passengers had to disembark.

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Source: Reuters