Owners wash their hands of stricken vessel

Cape Town. 180512.AThe Japanese vessel, Eihatsu Maru docked at Que 500 , Cape Town harbour . The ship ran aground at 5.15am on Saturday in thick fog and ended up on at Clifton 1st Beach.. Picture Neil Baynes. reporter Junior Bester.

Cape Town. 180512.AThe Japanese vessel, Eihatsu Maru docked at Que 500 , Cape Town harbour . The ship ran aground at 5.15am on Saturday in thick fog and ended up on at Clifton 1st Beach.. Picture Neil Baynes. reporter Junior Bester.

Published Jun 19, 2012

Share

The Eihatsu Maru fishing vessel which ran aground on Clifton beach may have to be sold as the owners have not paid “a single red cent” of the R7 million salvage bill.

And the cargo of frozen tuna is likely to be sold for a song as it is apparently too tainted with controversy for Japanese markets and tastes, as it apparently offends their sense of propriety.

The longliner, which ran aground at Clifton’s First Beach last month, is in Cape Town harbour with a damaged propeller and shaft. On board is 70 tons of frozen tuna in its freezers that no one seems in a hurry to buy.

The SA Maritime Safety Authority (Samsa) wanted to go to court on Monday to ask the court to sell the vessel, cargo and fuel to defray costs, but the Japanese consulate has asked Samsa to hold off until Tuesday.

Samsa regional manager Dave Colly said on Monday the consul had asked that Samsa first meet members of the Japanese Tuna Association this morning to try to resolve the matter out of court.

The longliner is apparently a Japanese vessel, but owned by a Chinese company. In terms of Japan’s maritime regulations, vessels on their register must comply with conditions such as having a Japanese master and engineer and be owned by a Japanese company. The Eihatsu Maru did not comply with these conditions.

“It is still a Japanese ship, but it was apparently sold to a Japanese front company, because it is a Chinese owner. They have not paid a single red cent and are disputing all the costs. The whole thing has turned into a nightmare. They’ve shown absolutely no remorse, absolutely no sense of wanting to take responsibility,” Colly said.

Samsa had put out feelers in Japan to find out what the cargo of tuna would fetch.

“Markets can pay up to $200/kg for certain types of fish, but feedback we’ve been getting is that the tuna is too tainted by scandal, so buyers in Japan are refusing to pay top dollar. It’s a scandal to them because no Japanese ship would conduct itself in this manner, arguing about the bill and having a front company. It’s not helping marketing the fish. We’d be lucky if we get $250 000 for the 70 tons.”

The R7m bill is for the salvage operation only, without harbour fees.

The morning the vessel ran aground the weather was calm, but there was thick fog and it was still dark.

Asked if Samsa had established the reason for the vessel running aground, Colly said: “The captain was asleep and his instructions were to call him when they saw lights. We suspect their radar was not working. They claim it was, but if they had radar they would have known there were rocks there.”

The owners claim the radar had broken during the salvage operation, but Colly said that was unlikely.

* Colly said repairs to the Cidade de Paraty, which was towed into False Bay 10 days ago, were progressing well. The floating production, storage and offloading vessel developed generator trouble about 45 miles off False Bay on June 7, but could not be towed in until June 10 because of bad weather. Colly said the owners were “throwing a lot of time and money” at the vessel.

* The other stricken vessel in False Bay, the Panos Earth, will be sold by judicial auction on Wednesday. The ship, en route from Venezuela to China with a cargo of iron ore, was towed into the bay on March 20. She had lost engine power, apparently from dirty fuel, about 250 miles south of Cape Town. The owners and insurers walked away from the ship several weeks ago. Smit salvage has a full team on board.

Cape Times

Related Topics: