- Torrey Canyon
The Torrey Canyon was a
supertanker capable of carrying a cargo of 120,000 tons ofcrude oil , which was wrecked off the western coast ofCornwall in1967 causing anenvironmental disaster .The ship
When laid down in the
United States in1959 she had a capacity of 60,000 tons but she was enlarged inJapan to 120,000 tons capacity. At the time of the accident she was owned byBarracuda Tanker Corporation, a subsidiary ofUnion Oil Company ofCalifornia but chartered to British Petroleum. She was convert|974.4|ft|m|1 long, convert|125.4|ft|m|1 beam and convert|68.7|ft|m|1 draught.She left the
Kuwait National Petroleum Company refinery at Minaal-Ahmadi , on her final voyage on19 February ,1967 with full cargo of crude oil, reaching theCanary Islands by14 March . From there her planned route was to Milford Haven.Accident
On
18 March 1967 , owing to a navigational error, the "Torrey Canyon" struck Pollard's Rock in theSeven Stones reef between the Cornish mainland and theScilly Isles .This was the first major oil spill; a fairly adequate outline of how to deal with a coastal oil spill had been issued to local authorities some years previously but had apparently been forgotten, so it was widely reported that no plans had been prepared beforehand to deal with it. The tanker had to be ready to deliver its cargo to anywhere in the world, and so only had small-scale charts; she used
LORAN but not the more accurateDecca Navigator . When the risk of collision with a fishing fleet became obvious, there was some confusion between the Master and the helmsman (who was actually the cook and had little experience) as to whether she was in manual or automatic steering mode; by the time this was resolved, it was too late. Unsuccessful attempts were made to float the ship off thereef , and one member of the Dutch salvage team was killed. The ship broke apart after being stranded on the reef for several days and bombed by aircraft. [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/6469059.stm Torrey Canyon 'lessons learned' "BBC News"2007-03-19 ] ] Attempts to use foam booms to contain the oil were also of limited success due to their fragility in high seas. The ship now sits in 30m at coord|50|2.50|N|6|7.73|W|display=inline,title.Impact
Some convert|50|mi of French and convert|120|mi of Cornish coast were contaminated. Around 15,000
sea bird s were killed, along with huge numbers of marine organisms, before the convert|270|sqmi slick dispersed. Much damage was caused by the heavy use of so-calleddetergents to break up the slick - these were first-generation variants of products originally formulated to clean surfaces in ships' engine-rooms, with no concern over the toxicity of their components, and many observers believed that they were officially referred to as 'detergents', rather than the more accurate 'solvent-emulsifiers', to encourage comparison with much more benign domestic cleaning products. Some 42 vessels sprayed over 10,000 tons of these dispersants onto the floating oil and they were also deployed against oil stranded on beaches. In Cornwall, they were often misused - for example, by emptying entire 45-gallon drums over the clifftop to 'treat' inaccessible coves or by pouring a steady stream from a low-hovering helicopter. On the heavily-oiled beach atSennen Cove , dispersant pouring from drums was 'ploughed' into the sand by bulldozers over a period of several days, burying the oil so effectively that it could still be found a year or more later. It is probable that the general resistance to the proper use of later-generation, much-improved oil-spill dispersants arose as a result of this operation. Claims were made by the British and French Governments against the owners of the vessel and the subsequent settlement was the largest ever in marine history for an oil claim. The British Government was only able to serve its writ against the owners by arresting the Torrey Canyon's sistership, the Lake Palourde, when she put in for minor provisions atSingapore , four months after the oil spill. A young British lawyer, Anthony O'Connor, from aSingaporean law firm,Drew & Napier , was deputised to arrest the ship on behalf of the British Government by attaching a writ to its mast. O'Connor was able to board the ship and serve the writ as the ship's crew thought he was a whisky salesman. The French Government, alerted to the Lake Palourde's presence, pursued the ship withmotor boat s, but were unable to board and serve their writ. ["The Times",April 4 ,1968 ]The disaster led to many changes in international regulations, for example the
Civil Liability Convention (CLC) of1969 , which imposed strict liability on ship owners without the need to prove negligence, and the1973 International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships .Cultural references
The "Torrey Canyon" disaster was the subject of a satirical song by
Serge Gainsbourg on the album "Comic Strip".ee also
*
Humphry Bowen
*Oil Spill References
*"Torrey Canyon pollution and marine life, Marine Biological Assn U.K.(ed. J.E.Smith), 1968 (Cambridge Univ. Press)
*"In the wake of the Torrey Canyon", R. Petrow, 1968 (New York: David Mackay Co, Inc.)
*"Oil and water - the Torrey Canyon disaster, E.Cowan, 1968 (Philadelphia: Lippincott)
*"Senate Congressional Record", November 12 1969Notes
External links
* [http://www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/hu/ergsinhu/aboutergs/torrey.html The Torrey Canyon disaster]
* [http://www.scillynews.co.uk/?p=11115 Scilly News]
* [http://greennature.com/article228.html Green Nature]
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