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Fire Damage To Phuket L P G Cargo Ship Estimated At Bt400K


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Fire damage to Phuket LPG cargo ship estimated at B400k

Phuket Gazette

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The fire destroyed the communications room, but was soon contained and did not spread to the main LPG storage tanks, which were empty. Photo: Thawit Bilabdullar

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A fire-response team heads out to assess the blaze before committing firefighters on board the ship. Photo: Thawit Bilabdullar

PHUKET: -- Damage to the liquid propane gas (LPG) cargo ship that caught fire off Phuket yesterday may reach up to 400,000 baht, the Phuket Gazette was told today.

“The communications room was heavily damaged by the fire. We believe that’s where it started. The radio and radar systems were damaged, as were a storeroom and one room in the crew’s quarters,” said Narudeth Kaewphakdee, general manager of the ship’s operating company Siam Marinetime Co Ltd in Bangkok.

The 80-meter long Kanthicha caught fire at about 8am, raising fears that the ship’s cargo might explode.

The alarm was raised by the only crewman aboard, who was on his way to the engine room when he saw smoke pouring out from the communications room on the second floor of the superstructure.

A combined firefighting task force comprising officers from the Phuket Marine Office, Wichit Municipality and the Royal Thai Navy Third Area Command took about three hours to contain the blaze.

However, the Kanthicha’s main LPG storage tanks were empty, explained Marine Police Deputy Superintendent Prasert Srikoonrat.

“There was no LPG on board. It had all been sold already, and the main tanks were empty,” Lt Col Prasert said.

“It did, however, have 5,000 liters of ‘fuel oil’ and 200 liters of diesel on board,” he added.

The Kanthicha has been anchored 2 kilometers offshore from the Deep Sea Port at Ao Makham for about two months, said Col Prasert.

Mr Narudeth, from Siam Marinetime Co Ltd, told the Phuket Gazette that the Kanthicha had arrived in Phuket from Myanmar, where she unloaded cargo from mainland China.

“The Kanthicha was scheduled to depart Phuket today, bound for Sri Racha [on the Gulf of Thailand],” he added.

Additional reporting by Orawin Narabal

Source: http://www.phuketgaz...400k-18116.html

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-- Phuket Gazette 2012-10-08

Posted

What a rust bucket, luckily its burnt because it looks past its use by date'

Rumor mill has it that it was decommissioned and 'parked up' awaiting salvage. Probably a last ditch effort by the owners to sell it to the insurance Co.

" Planned to depart to Sri Racha " with a crew of one,? has certain smell about it.

Please somebody correct me if I'm wrong. An empty gas container is almost as lethal as a full one unless meticulously cleaned and neutralised.

Posted

What a rust bucket, luckily its burnt because it looks past its use by date'

Rumor mill has it that it was decommissioned and 'parked up' awaiting salvage. Probably a last ditch effort by the owners to sell it to the insurance Co.

" Planned to depart to Sri Racha " with a crew of one,? has certain smell about it.

Please somebody correct me if I'm wrong. An empty gas container is almost as lethal as a full one unless meticulously cleaned and neutralised.

That's certainly the case with petrol. Take a one gallon milk carton and put a table spoon full of gas inside, shake it vigorously, light it on fire and you get one heck of a percussion bomb.

Posted

What a rust bucket, luckily its burnt because it looks past its use by date'

The fact that a fire raged for three hours on a ship this size, starting in the room containing the radar systems, and only caused about $13,000 in damage should tell you something.

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