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Tanker hired by US military ablaze off UK after hit by container ship

Smoke and flames rise from a collision between oil tanker and a cargo ship off the northeastern coast of England in this picture on March 10, 2025. (Reuters)
Smoke and flames rise from a collision between oil tanker and a cargo ship off the northeastern coast of England in this picture on March 10, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 10 March 2025

Tanker hired by US military ablaze off UK after hit by container ship

Smoke and flames rise from a collision between oil tanker and a cargo ship off the northeastern coast of England in this picture
  • Two maritime security sources said there was no indication of any malicious activity or other actors involved in the incident
  • Local officials said 32 casualties had been met by ambulances but by mid-afternoon only one remained in hospital

LONDON: A tanker carrying jet fuel for the US military was hit by a container ship off northeast England on Monday, with the collision igniting a blaze on both vessels, causing multiple explosions and forcing both crews to abandon ship.
The tanker, which can carry tens of thousands of tons of jet fuel, was at anchor when the smaller container ship struck it, rupturing its cargo tank and releasing fuel into the sea, its operator said. Its owner Stena Bulk gave the same details.
Two maritime security sources said there was no indication of any malicious activity or other actors involved in the incident.
Local officials said 32 casualties had been met by ambulances but by mid-afternoon only one remained in hospital.
But there was still a risk of environmental damage, experts said.
The tanker, the Stena Immaculate, operated by US logistics group Crowley, was carrying Jet-A1 fuel when it was struck by the Portuguese-flagged cargo ship Solong while anchored near Hull, Crowley wrote on X.
The tanker is part of a US government program designed to supply the armed forces with fuel when required. A US military spokesperson told Reuters on Monday it had been on a short-term charter to the US Navy’s Military Sealift Command.
The Solong’s Hamburg-based owner Ernst Russ said separately that the vessel had been involved in a collision with the Stena Immaculate in an incident which took place at 1000 GMT whilst the vessel was transiting the North Sea, off the British coast of Humberside.
“Both vessels have sustained significant damage in the impact of the collision and the subsequent fire,” Ernst Russ said in a statement.
“13 of the 14 Solong crew members have been brought safely shore. Efforts to locate the missing crew member are ongoing.”
The Solong is carrying 15 containers of sodium cyanide, a toxic chemical used mainly in gold mining, and an unknown quantity of alcohol, according to a casualty report from maritime data provider Lloyd’s List Intelligence.
Emergency teams sent a helicopter, fixed-wing aircraft, lifeboats and nearby vessels with firefighting capability to the incident on Monday morning.
“A fire occurred as a result of the allision and fuel was reported released,” Crowley said. An allision is a collision where one vessel is stationary.
Crowley said there had been multiple explosions on board.

Environmental risk 
Martin Slater, director of operations at Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, said East Yorkshire’s coast was home to protected and significant colonies of seabirds including puffins and gannets, with many offshore on the sea ahead of the nesting season.
A Greenpeace spokesperson said any impact would depend on factors including the amount and type of oil carried by the tanker, the fuel carried by both ships, and how much of that, if any, had entered the water, plus the weather conditions.
One insurance specialist said the pollution risk was lower than if the tanker had been carrying crude oil.
“A lot depends really on cargo carried, how many tanks were breached and how bad the fire is,” the insurance source said.
Mark Sephton, professor of Organic Geochemistry at Imperial College London, added that the relatively small hydrocarbons of jet fuel could be degraded by bacteria more quickly than larger molecules.
“The fact that we are moving into warmer temperatures will also speed up biodegradation rates,” he said.
The incident occurred in a busy waterway, with traffic running from the ports along Britain’s northeast coast to the Netherlands and Germany, shipping industry sources said.
Maritime analytics website MarineTraffic said the 183-meter (600 ft)-long Stena Immaculate was anchored off Immingham, northeast England, when it was struck by the 140-meter (460 ft)-long Solong, which was en route to Rotterdam.
Ship insurer Skuld of Norway would only confirm that the Solong was covered with it for protection & indemnity (P&I), a segment of insurance that covers environmental damage and crew injuries or fatalities.
Solong’s manager, Hamburg-based Ernst Russ, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Stena Immaculate’s P&I insurer, which was listed as Steamship, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Cambodia evacuates a village on disputed border with Thailand as tensions rise

Updated 8 sec ago

Cambodia evacuates a village on disputed border with Thailand as tensions rise

Cambodia evacuates a village on disputed border with Thailand as tensions rise
PHNOM PENH: Cambodia on Thursday evacuated hundreds of people from a village along its disputed border with Thailand, a day after one of its residents was reported killed when shooting between the two nations broke out there.
Wednesday’s shooting occurred two days after a Thai soldier lost a foot to a land mine while patrolling another area of the border. Thailand blamed Cambodia for the blast and announced it was suspending honoring the terms of a ceasefire partly brokered by US President Donald Trump.
Territorial disputes over exactly where the border lies between the Southeast Asian neighbors led to five days of armed conflict in late July that killed dozens of soldiers and civilians. But tensions remained high. Many terms of a more detailed truce agreement signed last month have not yet been implemented.
A Cambodian man identified as Dy Nai was reportedly killed in shooting Wednesday, while three other people were wounded.
About 250 families from Prey Chan village in Cambodia’s northwestern province of Banteay Meanchey, where the shooting took place, were evacuated to a Buddhist temple about 30 kilometers (18 miles) from the border, said Ly Sovannarith, the provincial vice governor.
The same village was the site of a violent but not lethal confrontation in September between Thai security personnel and Cambodian villagers.
The Cambodian Defense Ministry on Thursday led members of a team assigned to monitor the ceasefire at the border. The observer team included officials from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet on Wednesday called for an independent investigation into the incident to bring justice to those affected by the shooting.
The ceasefire appeared to be breaking down after the land mine explosion earlier this week. Thailand accused Cambodia of laying new mines in violation of the truce, which Cambodia denied. Thailand said it would pause implementation of the agreement indefinitely. It also demanded that Cambodia apologize, conduct a thorough investigation and implement prevent such incidents in the future.
Hun Manet said the shooting occurred after Thai forces engaged in “numerous provocative actions for many days with the objective of instigating confrontations.” He added that Cambodia would still honor the ceasefire terms.
The Thai army alleged that Cambodian soldiers fired into a district in Thailand’s eastern province of Sa Kaeo, and that the Thai side “fired warning shots in response.”
“Cambodia’s accusations that Thailand initiated fire, provoked conflict, and violated the ceasefire are entirely false. Cambodia’s firing from a civilian area as cover constitutes using human shields, violating humanitarian principles and demonstrating complete disregard for Cambodian civilian lives.” army spokesperson Maj. Gen. Winthai Suvaree said in a statement Wednesday.
Thailand and Cambodia have a history of enmity going back centuries, when they were warring empires. Their competing territorial claims stem largely from a 1907 map drawn when Cambodia was under French colonial rule, which Thailand has argued is inaccurate.
The International Court of Justice in 1962 awarded sovereignty to Cambodia over an area that included the 1,000-year-old Preah Vihear temple, which still rankles many Thais.
The October truce agreement does not spell out a path to resolve the underlying basis of the dispute.