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Newsletter 01
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Bad navigation Faulty navigation instruments Bad weather Engine breakdown etc.
Stop engines immediately (it happens that a ship runs aground with very little speed on a very soft bottom with very little slope) and that nobody on the bridge or in the engine room has felt it) Sound general alarm Watertight doors to be closed VHF watch maintained on channel 16 Broadcast to other vessels Sound signals, Light / Shapes to be exhibited especially important in case of fog) Deck lighting switched on Check position on chart Take note of any valuable information (time, course steered, speed, log, eventual manoeuvres, etc.) Sound bilges, tanks
Immediately take overboard soundings around vessel to check on what type of sandbank the ship is lying. If the ship is on top of a flat sandbank the danger of breaking in two is minimal. If the ship lies on a mountainous sandbank the risk of breaking is real and the stress on the ship enormous. In that case urgent action must be taken:
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try to free the ship by giving full astern (or full ahead) with successively the rudder to hard starboard and hard port (a lot depends on the type and size of ship) call the assistance of tug boats consider jettison of cargo (to throw cargo overboard). Be careful of risk of pollution
Evaluate risks of pollution Inform Company and any third parties if relevant (P & I Club, Hull underwriters, Port authorities, etc) Update if necessary vessel's position in radio room, satellite terminal and other automatic distress transmitter (GMDSS) Consider danger of the situation and if possible take pictures Consider further actions with consideration for:
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salvage risks of sinking (emergency message, EPIRB's, abandon ship) secure position (change of tide, weather, stream, stress risks, stability) assistance, port of refuge, oil spills
Keep the Company always informed Enter every action taken in the log book
OVERBOARD SOUNDINGS
When a ship has ran aground, it is of good practice to take the overboard soundings in a well defined pattern and to send these soundings together with other relevant information to the Company and other rescuing parties. This will allow them to assess the situation properly with regard to the ship's stability, stress on the hull and allow them to take the right measures to refloat the vessel or take any other rescuing action if the master hasn't done so yet. For vessels of less than 200 m in length, the hull will be divided in 10 equal parts. Starting from the stem over starboard to the stern and than back onto the stem over port giving thus 20 sounding points (Figure 1).
Figure 1 For vessels of more than 200 m in length, the hull will be divided in 15 sections giving 30 soundings (Figure 2)
Figure 2
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