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Britain: Planned disposal of defunct US ships poses environmental
hazard
By Barry Mason
23 October 2003
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Able UK has signed a £16 million contract to break up
13 US ships that were docked on the James River in Virginia. The
ships had once been part of the US National Defence Reserve Fleet,
which is administered by the Department of Transportations
Maritime Administration (MARAD). They are part of a fleet of around
150 ships that MARAD wants to send for disposal.
The former US cargo ships are ageing and in a dilapidated state.
All of them are more than 35 years old, and some 55 years old.
Able UK has been granted a licence by the British governments
Environment Agency to dismantle the vessels. The plan is to tow
them across the Atlantic to be broken up in Hartlepool, a town
on the estuary of the River Tees on the North East coast of England.
The enterprise threatens an environmental disaster caused by the
sinking or spillage of asbestos and harmful chemicals from these
rusting hulks.
The pressure group Friends of the Earth (FOE) has published
a table giving details of the structural state of the ships. It
shows that they have a high risk of their hulls leaking. On a
scale of 1 to 5, with 1 being highest risk and 5 being lowest,
9 of the 13 ships fall in category 2 or higher. Between them,
the ships hold more than 500,000 gallons of oil and fuel. Some
of them are also heavily polluted with asbestos and PCBs (polychlorinated
biphenyls).
PCBs are organic pollutants that can enter the food chain and
become concentrated, posing a risk to human health. They are thought
to damage DNA and are probably carcinogenic. If they were to enter
the sea, they could be ingested by fish and then by humans.
There is a strong possibility of oil spillage during the operation.
The contract with Able UK calls for an oil spillage management
company to be retained during the towing operation and on arrival
in Teesside. According to FOE, one of the vessels, The Donner,
has already spilt oil into the James River in Virginia.
The ships are due to be tandem towed across the
Atlantica cheap but risky option whereby two ships are simultaneously
towed by one tug. A report issued by the Basel Action Network
(BAN) has highlighted the deterioration of the ships hulls
and claims that tandem towing will increase the risk of the ships
breaching, leaking or sinking. The report, issued October 20,
also quotes a shipping insurance expert: We believe it is
extremely difficult if not impossible in this market to insure
any tandem scrap tows. The reason being the high level of risk
involved of a loss at sea.
Environmental groups in the US went to court on September 26
in an attempt to stop the ships being towed across the Atlantic,
arguing that it would be safer to dispose of them domestically.
BAN and the Sierra Club represented by Earthjustice, sought a
temporary restraining order (TRO). Part of the groups case
was that the export of the ships contravened the PCB export prohibition.
Whilst partly granting a TRO, Judge Rosemary Collyer ruled that
four of the ships could be exported. The fate of the remaining
nine ships will be decided at a court hearing scheduled for October
20.
The main contract for the disposal of the 13 ships was signed
between MARAD and US holding company Post-Services Remediation
Partners (PRP). Able UK was subcontracted to dismantle them. As
a sweetener, the sale of two partially built naval refuelling
vessels was linked with the deal. BAN cites industry insiders
who claim that around $150 million profit is likely to be made
out of the sale of these two ships. The report also claims that
Able UK, which was formerly the subcontractor for the holding
company, has bought up PRP.
If the export of these ships is allowed to go ahead, it will
set a legal precedent to bypass the Toxic Substances Control Acts
ban on the export of PCBs. This would make it easier in the future
for such ships to be sent to countries with little or no environmental
protection legislation.
Four of the vessels are now on their journey to Hartlepool.
The contract to break up the ships includes a clause that dry
dock provision will be available on arrival at their destination.
(Dry dock facility would help reduce possible contamination by
containing any leakage.) Currently such facilities do not exist.
The company originally applied to Hartlepool Council to reinstate
dock gates on a previous dry dock. However the council advised
Able UKs solicitors that if Able UK requires dry dock
facilities to enable it to carry out its proposed ships
decommissioning, the required planning permissions are not in
place. English Nature, a government conservation agency,
also stated that before planning permission could be granted,
an Environmental Impact Assessment should be carried out.
At this point, the company withdrew its application and instead
proposed to build a rock-filled bund, using planning
permission granted in 1997 by the now-defunct Teesside Development
Corporation. Hartlepool Council has questioned the validity of
the previous planning permission, and insists that planning permission
for the necessary dry dock is not in place.
The councils statement was issued on October 8 after
the first two boats had set sail. On the following day, FOE UK
issued a statement calling for the two vessels to be turned back.
Campaign director Mike Childs said, The whole issue is becoming
a sorry farce. Able UK does not have planning permission to build
a dry dock to dispose of these boats, and it wont be allowed
to deal with them in a wet dock. Yet two heavily polluted, rusty
and dilapidated ships have been allowed to set sail from the USA
to Teesside, and two more are due to leave any minute.
FOE is trying to get a judicial review of the licence originally
issued by the Environment Agency.
Local member of parliament Peter Mandelson, former minister
in the Blair government and a close confidant of the prime minister,
has lined up with local business interests to support Able UKs
managing director Peter Stephenson. In a statement to the House
of Lords, Labours environment minister Lord Whitty insisted
that the vessels were no threat, saying they would not be
permitted into UK waters if they presented a specific risk of
environmental pollution.
The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) opposes
the scheme. Nick Mason, a conservation manager for the RSPB, said;
We would remind everyone involved in this issue that the
wildlife and habitats of Teesmouth and the Cleveland coast are
designated as a special protection area under the European Birds
Directive.
There is widespread opposition throughout the Teesside area
to the proposal to scrap the ships. More than 90 percent of calls
to a local newspaper condemned the plan. A local protest group
has been formed, the Hartlepool Volunteer Defence Force.
Teesside was once a major coal mining area. The Northumbria
Tourist Board, which covers the area, is opposed to the proposal
to bring in the ships. It has labelled the move a serious
environmental threat to the coastal area, which had been
damaged over many decades as a result of the coal mining industryone
of the practices of the mining industry was to dump waste just
off shore.
Across the estuary from Hartlepool are giant chemical factories.
This area has the highest rate in England for cancer, and there
is a high incidence of respiratory disease.
Geoff Lilley, a local worker, was quoted in the Guardian
newspaper of October 14:
Weve had more than our share of pollution... If
they went to Southend [on the south coast of England] there would
be a revolution.
The paper also spoke to Margaret Sneddon, a community volunteer:
This is not a middle class protest... People there dont
want the ship. OK theyll perhaps give us jobs, but how many
people will it kill? The stigma for the town will last for years
and years.
See Also:
An exchange on a socialist
approach to the protection of the environment
[10 January 2001]
Irish government edges
towards legal action against Britains Sellafield nuclear
plant
[19 April 2000]
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