Background
On 30 October 2000, at 4:30 am, the MRCC (Marine Rescue
Co-ordination Centre), CROSS Corsen, received a distress call from
the Ievoli Sun, a chemical tanker flying the Italian flag. The vessel,
en route from Fawley (UK) to Barcelona with 14 crew members and
6,000 tonnes of chemicals, was 45 nautical miles north of the island
of Batz.
The captain reported a leak in the bow section of the double
bottom. The Atlantic maritime Prefect in Brest sent the Abeille
Flandre, based at Ushant island, to assist the vessel. A Super Frelon helicopter and an evaluation team arrived on site at 8:05 am and,
considering the gravity of the situation, began to winch the crew
to safety. The rescue operation ended successfully at 9:20 am. At
12:00, the maritime Prefect activated the Polmar Sea Plan.
On their
arrival, the Abeille Flandre's crew noticed some pollution around
the Ievoli Sun's bow section. The weather and sea conditions in
the area at that time made the risk of grounding obvious, therefore
creating a major pollution threat on the Côtes d'Armor coast.
After studying the possible options, a team was winched aboard the
Ievoli Sun and passed a tow to the Abeille Flandre. Towing began
at 5:15 pm, at 4 knots heading northeast, the only possible route
given both the weather and sea conditions and the vessel's position.
On 31 October, at 9:00 am, two thirds of the way towards the shelter
of the Cotentin peninsula, the Ievoli Sun sank to a depth of 70
m, 9 nautical miles north of the Casquets (12 nautical miles from
Alderney and 20 nautical miles from the Cap de la Hague).
| Ship | |
|---|---|
| Name | Ievoli Sun (ex-Gennaro Ievoli) |
| Construction | Esercizion Cantieri-Viareggio (Italie) 1989 |
| Type | Chemical tanker with separated ballasts |
| Transport capacity | 7 333 tonnes |
| Tanks | 16 tanks et 2 slop tanks made of stainless steel |
| Length | 115 m |
| Draught | 6,29 m |
| Engine | Wartsila Vasa - 4080 horse power |
| Commercial capacity | 7 130 m³ |
| Bunker | 160 tonnes of IFO 180 |
| Marine diesel | 40 tonnes |
| Flag | Italian |
| Owner | Marnavi |
Events
Within a few hours, the Maritime Prefect for the Channel
and the North Sea, based in Cherbourg, took over operations on the
French side. The information he was provided with, as of late afternoon
on 30 October was that the vessel was carrying 160 tonnes of heavy
fuel and 40 tonnes of diesel, and that the cargo was made up of
3,998 tonnes of styrene, 1,027 tonnes of methyl ethyl ketone (MEK)
and 996 tonnes of isopropyl alcohol (IPA).
To avoid potential
risks of air pollution from styrene and marine pollution from fuel,
general surveillance missions began immediately with the help of
French and British vessels and aircraft. The wreck was marked out
with beacon buoys and maritime traffic was diverted. Initial observations
showed only a small number of slicks.
| Styrene | |
|---|---|
| Quantity (tonnes) | 3, 998 |
| Owner | Shell, Holland |
| From | Rotterdam, Netherlands |
| To | Berre, France |
| Methylethylketone (MEK) | |
|---|---|
| Quantity (tonnes) | 1,027 |
| Owner | Exxon, United Kingdom |
| From | Fawley, United Kingdom |
| To | Genoa, Italy |
| Isopropyl alcohol (IPA) | |
|---|---|
| Quantity (tonnes) | 996 |
| Owner | Esso Chemical, Belgium |
| From | Rotterdam, Netherlands |
| To | Barcelona, Spain |
Response organisation
The vessel sank in international waters, at the boundary
between French, British and the Channel Islands' territory. Within
the framework of the Manche Plan, the English authorities sent
Maritime and Coastal Agency (MCA) representatives to Cherbourg where
the maritime Prefect had activated the Polmar Command Centre. On
Tuesday 31 October, at 7:00 pm, the Channel Departmental Prefect
implemented the Polmar Land Plan and set up the Polmar Command Centre
at Saint-Lô Prefecture.
On
1 November, the French Western Area of Defence, co-ordinator of
the Polmar Terre (Land) plan, set up an emergency centre in its
Command Centre in Rennes, which was still working on the Erika pollution.
Name: Ievoli Sun
Date: 30 October 2000
Location: France
Accident area : 45 nautical miles from Batz, Brittany
Cause of spill : damage to ship
Products transported : styrene, Methylethylketone: MEK, Isopropyl alcohol: IPA
Quantities transported : styrene: 3, 998 tonnes, MEK: 1, 027 tonnes, IPA: 996 tonnes
Type of pollutants : styrene, Methylethylketone: MEK, Isopropyl alcohol: IPA
Quantities spilled : styrene: 3, 998 tonnes, MEK: 1, 027 tonnes, IPA: 996 tonnes
Ship type : chemical tanker
Date built : 1989
Length : 115 m
Flag : Italian
Conclusion
One year on from the Erika accident, the Ievoli Sun spill reminds
us that accidental pollution from oil tankers is not the only danger
which threatens our coasts. In terms of human safety in the sphere
of marine pollution, chemical tankers can be an even larger threat,
because of the chemicals they transport, as well, of course, as
their bunker fuel.
Furthermore, this accident has proved to us once again the limits
of our knowledge in this domain, both in terms of the behaviour
of chemicals when in contact with seawater or when trapped in the
tanks of a ship which has sunk, and in terms of their potential
impact on marine flora and fauna. In this example, environmental
and economic factors are once again inextricably linked.

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Last update: April 2006