Scrap Metal Fire Causes Vessel To Sink

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Credits: Arny Mogensen/Unsplash

The Nautical Institute reports of a vessel sinking because of scrap metal fire.

The Incident

A general cargo vessel was loading scrap metal into both the forward and aft cargo holds. A loader was lowered into the aft cargo hold to smooth the heap of scrap metal in certain areas. At one point, the operator of the loader saw a small amount of white smoke rising from within the scrap heap in the port aft section of the hold. He immediately raised the alarm.

The shore fire department was called while the crew prepared fire hoses. Soon, the loader operator – who was still in the hold – saw flames in the scrap heap. A few minutes later, the crew were able to direct water jets from fire hoses onto the scrap metal heap. The loader operator evacuated the hold, leaving the arm of the loader extended above the hatch coaming. Local shore fire fighters arrived and took control of the firefighting activities. Not long after, the crew were asked to evacuate the vessel for their safety.

The shore fire fighters decided, based on experience in past firefighting of ship fires, to use a protein foam spray delivered from a large aerial-platform chemical-spray fire truck. As they made preparations for the application of the protein foam spray, the vessel listed to port, and the firefighters on the vessel withdrew. The fire continued to increase in size. About an hour after arriving, the shore fire fighters began spraying the protein foam into the aft cargo hold. This technique did not seem to have the desired effect and the shore firefighters asked the Master for permission to continue to use water. Permission was granted, but some 12 hours later, after the application of copious amounts of water, the vessel sank alongside the berth. The fire was then declared extinguished.

The investigation found, among other things, that the source of the fire was most likely to be a spark created by contact between metal objects, a battery, etc., in the scrap. The source then ignited combustible material mixed in the scrap (eg plastic, rubber, wood chips, paper). It was not possible to determine the exact origin of the fire. The investigation also found that the Master did not think to use the hold’s fixed CO2 firefighting equipment after the fire was first discovered. In fact, this was a moot point because the loader was left with its arm extended above the hatch coaming. This would have prevented the closing of the hold’s hatch, a necessary first step before releasing CO2.

Lessons learned

  • As seen in the previous MARS report (202345), scrap metal, while intuitively innocuous and listed as noncombustible in the IMSBC Code, is nonetheless a fire risk.
  • Reactions during an emergency are honed with training. Masters and crew should be aware of the most efficient firefighting methods on their ship and quickly be able to put these into practice.
  • Copious and uncontrolled amounts of water poured into a ship will cause a loss of stability and possibly the foundering of the vessel. This will, however, probably succeed in extinguishing any fire on board.

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Source: The Nautical Institute