A potential environmental catastrophe off Hong Kong’s coast


A handout photo taken yesterday and made available by the Hong Kong Government Flying Service shows a fire rescue ship spraying water towards the burning oil tanker ‘Aulac Fortune’ off the coast in southern Hong Kong. —AFP

HONG KONG: One man was killed and two others declared missing after an oil tanker caught fire while it was being refuelled off Hong Kong on Tuesday, sending a huge cloud of dark smoke billowing into the air. Twenty-three people were rescued after those on board the stricken Vietnamese-listed vessel either fell or jumped into the sea, police said. Some of the victims suffered burns, with four people injured, one of them seriously.

Fears of a potential environmental catastrophe in a busy shipping channel also known for porpoises and turtles were dampened late Tuesday after officials said no leak had been detected from the vessel which not carrying any oil cargo at the time of the accident. Fire department commander Yiu Men-yeung said the ship was about to be refuelled by an oil barge when the accident occurred.

He told reporters that according to the crew on the barge, they were "connecting the hoses for refueling for the oil tanker, and then there were three explosions", before the ship burst into flames. Yiu added that the vessel, which was on its way from the southern Chinese industrial city of Dongguan to Thailand, was not at risk of sinking. It took around five hours for firefighters to put out the blaze. But the tanker, which had a crew of 25 Vietnamese, was listing at a 30 degree angle. One Singaporean national was slightly injured on the oil barge, authorities said.

Shockwaves

Witnesses described feeling shockwaves when the explosions tore through the ship. "I felt my boat shaking. The tremble came from the sea," said speedboat driver Michael Kwok, who told AFP he heard three explosions while out on his boat nearby. Footage from before the fire was brought under control showed the stricken vessel listing with large plumes of black smoke coming from its middle and flames still burning on the deck.

A Hong Kong government statement said firefighters used four jets to contain the blaze, which could be seen not far off the southern side of Hong Kong's Lamma island. A fireboat was seen spraying two streams of water into the sea near the tilted side of the tanker, according to an AFP reporter at the scene, with a mass of twisted metal on the deck and a charred exterior wall bearing a "No Smoking" sign. Three more fireboats, a helicopter and a police boat were also circling the scene.

"I heard several banging and rumbling sounds, like someone with big hands knocking my glass door," a resident of Lamma island's Mo Tat New Village who gave his name as Shu told AFP. He added that a smaller banging sound followed about 10 seconds later. A fisherman from Lamma told local news channel i-Cable he first heard explosions and then saw "dense smoke" followed by a "ball of fire".

The name on the front of the tanker was Aulac Fortune, which the Hong Kong marine department tracker website showed as arriving at the South Lamma anchorage at 2:58 am Tuesday. Ship-tracking websites MarineTraffic and VesselFinder both classify the ship as an "oil/chemical tanker". The marine department said the tanker had already unloaded all oil cargo in previous ports and there was none onboard at the time of the accident. It added "the pollution control vessels are at (the) scene and no oil pollution is found so far".

Despite no reported leakage, environmentalist Gary Stokes said the incident was at an early stage and he was still trying to assess its ecological impact. "It is obviously something of concern when it comes to the environment with the animals out there -- it is the home of the finless porpoise," said Stokes, director of OceansAsia.org, referring to the waters near Lamma, adding its population is believed to be declining. Turtles are also known to nest on one of Lamma's coves. - AFP