Mark Thiessen, Associated Press, Over the Gulf of Alaska | World | Fri, April 06 2012, 2:21 PM
Ghost ship: In this photo provided by the U.S. Coast Guard, a plume of smoke rises from the derelict Japanese ship Ryou-Un Maru after it was hit by canon fire by a U.S. Coast Guard cutter on Thursday, April 5, 2012, in the Gulf of Alaska. The Coast Guard decided to sink the ship dislodged by last year's tsunami because it was a threat to maritime traffic and could have an environmental impact if it grounded. (AP/U.S. Coast Guard)
The long, lonely voyage of the Japanese ghost ship is over.
A US Coast Guard cutter unleashed cannon fire on the
abandoned 164-foot (50-meter) Ryou-Un Maru on Thursday, ending a
journey that began when last year's tsunami dislodged it and set it
adrift across the Pacific Ocean.
It sank into
waters more than 1,000 feet (305 meters) deep in the Gulf of Alaska,
more than 150 miles (240 kilometers) from land.
The crew pummeled the ghost ship with high explosive ammunition, and the
Ryou-Un Maru soon burst into flames, and began to take on water and
list, officials said.
A huge column of smoke
could be seen over the gulf as a Coast Guard C-130 cargo plane, sent to
observe the sinking, dropped a buoy to monitor for any possible
pollution from the sunken ship.
The Coast Guard warned mariners to stay away, and aviation authorities did the same for pilots.
In about four hours, the ship vanished into the water, said Chief Petty Officer Kip Wadlow in Juneau.
Officials decided to sink the ship rather than risk
the chance of it running aground or endangering other vessels in the
busy shipping lanes between North America and Asia.
The ship had no lights or communications system, and its tank was
able to carry more than 2,000 gallons (7570 liters) of diesel fuel.
Officials, however, didn't know how much fuel, if any, was aboard.
"It's less risky than it would be running into shore
or running into (maritime) traffic," Coast Guard spokesman Paul Webb
said.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency studied the
problem and decided it is safer to sink the ship and let the fuel
evaporate in the open water.
The ship was at
Hokkaido, Japan, and destined for scrapping when a magnitude-9.0
earthquake that struck the country in March 2011 triggered a tsunami.
The waves dislodged the vessel and set it adrift. In
total, about 5 million tons of debris was swept out to sea.
The boat did not have any cargo aboard, Webb said. He said
he didn't know who owned the Ryou-Un Maru, which had been traveling
about 1 mph in recent days.
As the Coast Guard
was readying to fire on the vessel, a Canadian fishing vessel, the
62-foot (19-meter) Bernice C, claimed salvage rights over the ghost
ship in international waters.
Plans to sink it
were halted so the Canadian crew could have a chance to take the
stricken ship. A Canadian official with knowledge of the situation told
The Associated Press that the Bernice C was unable to tow it.
That delay, in part, prompted the cargo plane to return to
Kodiak, Alaska, before the ship sank because the plane burned up fuel
while circling the area monitoring the situation.
The Canadian boat left, and once it was about 6 miles (10 kilometers)
from the Japanese vessel, the Coast Guard began to fire, first with 25
mm shells, then a few hours later with ammunition twice that size.
In the year since the tsunami, the debris from Japan has washed up on shores across the Pacific.
In January, a half dozen large buoys suspected to be
from Japanese oyster farms appeared at the top of Alaska's panhandle and
may be among the first debris from the tsunami.
State health and environmental officials have said there's little need
to be worried that debris landing on Alaska shores will be contaminated
by radiation.
The earthquake triggered the world's worst nuclear crisis since the Chernobyl accident in 1986.
State officials have been working with federal
counterparts to gauge the danger of debris including material affected
by a damaged nuclear power plant, to see if Alaska residents, seafood or
wild game could be affected. (nvn)