By
November
9, 2018
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Daily Mail
Norwegian NATO frigate ‘was warned it was on a collision course’ with oil
tanker but said ‘We’ve got control’… before smashing into the vessel and
running aground
One of the biggest warships in the Norwegian navy was
warned repeatedly it was on a collision course with a Britain-bound oil tanker
before the two vessels smashed into each other, it has been claimed.
Crew on board the KNM Helge Instad, part of a NATO
fleet in the Atlantic, insisted they ‘had control’ before smashing into Sola TS
in Sture, north of Bergen, Norway.
The frigate had received alerts from the tanker and
from the Coastal Maritime Traffic Center Fedje VTS, sources have told the
Norwegian news website Aldrimer. But ship management are said to have
responded: ‘We are in control’ in the run-up to the crash.
Some 10,000 litres of helicopter fuel from the frigate
has leaked into the sea after the collision tore a large hole in its side, the
military said. The frigate’s 137 crew members were evacuated amid fears that it
may sink.
Eight people on the KNM Helge Instad were injured in
the 4am collision said Rear Adm. Nils Andreas Stensoenes, the head of Norway’s
navy. Two of them were taken to a nearby hospital.
The ship, which had recently taken part in the vast
Trident Juncture NATO military drill in Norway, is ‘strongly listing,’
Stensoenes told a news conference Thursday afternoon. The frigate was lying in
the water almost on its side with its stern under the water.
The 442ft long frigate, built in Spain in 2009, is
part of a NATO fleet in the Atlantic. The alliance has been informed of the
accident, he said.
The Maltese-flagged oil tanker, Sola TS, was not
damaged and its 23-man crew remained on board. The shipping site Sysla reported
the tanker had been loaded with crude oil and was on its way to Britain.
Stensoenes said the cause of the accident was not
clear and the Navy would wait for the findings of Norway’s Accident
Investigation Board. Earlier reports had said a towboat was also involved in
the collision, but Stensoenes denied that report.
He said the frigate had been pushed by towboats into
shallow water where it could not sink fully.
‘We are in a security phase for the time being,’ he
said. He declined to comment on what would happen to the weapons on board the
ship.
Some 10,000 liters of helicopter fuel from the frigate
has leaked into the sea, said Johan Marius Ly of the Norwegian Coast Guard. The fuel
was expected to evaporate quickly.
Norway’s largest oil and gas company, Equinor,
formerly known as Statoil, said its non-emergency activities at the Sture
terminal where the collision occurred were shut down as a precaution for many
hours but were gradually starting up again late Thursday afternoon.
The Accident Investigation Board said because the
tanker is Maltese-registered, the Marine Safety Investigation Unit (MSIU) of
Malta will participate in the investigation.
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