The accident
On the night of 30 to 31 January 2006, the Maltese bulk carrier
the General Grot Rowecki, transporting 26,000 tonnes of phosphates
from Safi in Morocco to Police in Poland, collided with the Marshall
Islands chemical tanker the Ece en route from Casablanca in Morocco
to Ghent in Belgium.
The
accident occurred in a zone located 50 nautical miles (90 km) west
of Cherbourg, near the Casquet Traffic Separation Scheme in international
waters. The Ece, transporting 10,000 tonnes of phosphoric acid,
developed a leak and a significant list.

Rescue operations
The regional marine rescue
coordination centre (CROSS-Jobourg) coordinated the crew rescue
operation, in collaboration with the British Maritime and Coastguard
Agency. The 22 crew members were safely evacuated to Guernsey. The
tug boat the Abeille Liberté was sent to the scene of the
accident.
The Préfecture Maritime for the English Channel and the North Sea (Premar-Manche) then carried out a pollution risk analysis, with the support of the French Navy anti-pollution centre (CEPPOL) and Cedre. In addition to the cargo, according to information provided by the ship owner, there were 70 tonnes of propulsion fuel (IFO 180), 20 tonnes of marine diesel and 20 tonnes of lubricating oil onboard the Ece. The General Grot Rowecki, whose bluff bow was slightly damaged, was able to continue her journey.
The
tug boat the Abeille Liberté arrived on site on 31 January
towards 7 am. The assessment teams did not note any pollution, and
boarded the two damaged ships. The Ece showed a 25° stabilized
list to port and was no longer operating. When the assessment had
been completed, the vessel was taken in tow by the tug the Abeille
Liberté at around 3:30 pm, bound for the port of Le Havre.
In the course of towing, the Ece sank 70 m deep 50 nautical miles
west of the point of La Hague, on 1st February at 3:37 am. The
wreck lies in international waters, on the continental shelf of
the United Kingdom, in the French exclusive economic zone and the
French pollution response zone. The Manche Plan, a bilateral Franco-British mutual aid agreement
for rescue and pollution response, was activated on 1st February.
Response
Negotiations
between French and British authorities on the one hand and the ship-owner
and insurers on the other led to an agreement being met on 16 June
2006 for the removal of the hydrocarbons remaining onboard the wreck
(some forty tonnes) and for the planned controlled release of the
phosphoric acid, by opening the access channels to the six tanks
using a remote controlled robot. The operation will be undertaken
by the ship-owner during the summer period, under the control of
the authorities. The operations are to be completed by 15 September.
Until this date, fishing will continue to be banned around the wreck. The flag state was asked to take position
Lessons learnt
Name: Ece
Date: 31 January 2006
Location: Guernesey
Accident area: Les Casquets
Cause of spill: collision
Quantity transported: 10,000 tonnes
Type of pollutant: phosphoric acid
Ship type: chemical tanker
Date built: 1988
Length: 126 m
Flag: Marshall Islands

See also
Links
Last update: July 2006