Saturday 22 November 08 - 01:50
 

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Busy 'Cormorant' Born to Lift

Dutch towage and salvage operator Multraship successfully completed the salvage of the pusher tug Eclips only two days after it sank in Antwerp harbour last month.
The Cormorant raises the sunken tug from the depths of Antwerp Harbour.
The Cormorant raises the sunken tug from the depths of Antwerp Harbour.

It is still not known why Eclips sank on the night of 9 March, with all three crew managing to get off the tug just before it went down in 16m of water at the Vrasene dock.

The Multraship salvage team was concerned to prevent oil spilling from Eclips into the harbour. Oil booms were placed as a precautionary measure to help contain any possible spillages.

In the event, Multraship deployed its 600 tonne floating sheerlegs Cormorant, which was able to lift the tug out of the water intact and without spillage of any oil.

The busy Cormorant had only just returned from the Danube, where its services were instrumental in clearing wreckage of Zezelj Bridge, which had been impeding navigation on the river ever since it was bombed during the war in Kosovo. The ?7mcontract had been awarded to the Danube Consortium, a group founded by Multraship's managing director Kees Muller.

The self-propelled Cormorant, aided by pusher tugs, successfully removed 40,000 tonnes of concrete, asphalt and steel which had been blocking the Danube Fairway at Novi Sad.

MJ Information No: 18108

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The Cormorant raises the sunken tug from the depths of Antwerp Harbour.

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