Exxon Valdez Vessel Information:
Exxon Valdez Accident - Oil Spill:
On March 24, 1989, the oil tanker Exxon Valdez struck the Bligh Reef in the Prince William Sound region of Alaska leading to the biggest maritime disaster at that time. The vessel was en route to long beach, California from the Alyeska consortium's pipeline terminal in Valdez, Alaska. It was carrying 53 million gallons of crude oil on board, on 24th March early morning, the vessel struck Bligh Reef in Alaska's Prince William Sound causing some 11 million gallons of crude oil to spill into the water.
Causes of Oil Spill:
Investigation Reports & Trail:
Oil Spill Cleanup:
This Oil spill from Exxon Valdez seems to be massive and cleaning up and containing 11 million gallons of oil is not an easy task. Initial attempts made to contain the oil failed and in months that followed, the oil slick spread eventually covering about 1,300 miles of coastline. Exxon employees, federal responders and more than 11,ooo Alaska residents worked to clean up the oil spill.
Cleanup workers skimmed oil from water's surface, sprayed oil dispersant chemicals in the water and shore, washed oiled beaches with hot water and rescued and cleaned animals trapped in the oil. Exxon paid about $2 billion in cleanup costs and $1.8 billion for habitat restoration and personal damages due to the spill. The aggressive washing with high-pressure, hot water hoses was effective in removing the oil, but still, it did even more ecological damage to the plants and animals. Prince William Sound has been a pristine wilderness before the spill, after the Exxon Valdez oil spill incident it killed approximately 250,000 sea birds, 3,000 otters, 300 seals, 250 bald eagles and 22 killer whales. Many fishermen went bankrupt and the economies of small shoreline towns suffered a lot in the following years.
What Happened to Exxon Valdez after the Oil Spill?
Exxon Valdez, after the major oil spill on March 24, 1989, the vessel was towed to San Diago, the vessel arrived on June 10,1989 and repairs were started on June 30,1989 and has been sold to Sea river Maritime after repairs. The ship began running oil transport routes in Europe, where single-hulled oil tankers were still allowed. The vessel was renamed Exxon Mediterranean, then as SeaRiver Mediterranean and finally as S/R Mediterranean. In 2002, the European Union banned single-hulled tankers and the former tanker moved to Asian Waters. Exxon was sold to a Hong Kong-based shipping company. The company converted the old oil tanker to an ore carrier, renaming it as Dong Feng Ocean. In 2010, the vessel collided with another bulk carrier in the yellow sea and was once again severely damaged. Finally, the ship was renamed once more after the collision as Oriental Nicety, later in the year 2012 the vessel for sold for scrap to an Indian Company.
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Great series of information about oil spill
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