Dyflin
Well-Known Member
Inquiry raises questions
The maritime inquiry into the sinking of the "Bourbon Dolphin" will be followed on Friday by the naming of an investigative commission that will examine the circumstances around the tragedy.
The anchor handling vessel "Bourbon Dolphin" capsized and sank off the Shetlands earlier this month.
The inquiry that began Wednesday in Ålesund raised at least as many questions as it answered about the accident off the Shetlands that resulted in the death of eight persons.
Maritime inspector Nils-Ivar Sørdal had his debut in the position for the nearly 11-hour hearing.
"All material from the maritime inquiry will be given to the commission. In my opinion the inquiry provided much valuable information that will be very helpful in the investigative commission's further work," Sørdal said.
One question that will need to be answered is why the "Bourbon Dolphin", which was to have been an assisting vessel, operated as the main vessel during the anchoring operation on the drilling rig Transocean Rather. It remains unknown who made this decision, and why.
The captain responsible for the other anchor handling vessel, "Highland Valour", owned by Gulf Offshore and registered in London, was not present at the hearing. The person in charge of the operation aboard the Transocean Rather, owned by the world's largest drilling company Transocean, was absent.
"The inquiry aimed to question some of the survivors as quickly after the accident as possible. If we were to bring the companies mentioned here in it would be necessary to take more time," Sørdal told news agency NTB.
The first mate of the "Bourbon Dolphin" testified to a range of errors and failures during the operation. The "Highland Valour" reportedly pulled the anchor chain in the opposite direction requested, and that this was not the first time the London registered vessel had made mistakes.
The "Bourbon Dolphin" also appeared to have non-functioning emergency equipment and there have been questions raised about the vessel's stability.
http://www.aftenposten.no/english/local/article1758077.ece
The maritime inquiry into the sinking of the "Bourbon Dolphin" will be followed on Friday by the naming of an investigative commission that will examine the circumstances around the tragedy.
The anchor handling vessel "Bourbon Dolphin" capsized and sank off the Shetlands earlier this month.
The inquiry that began Wednesday in Ålesund raised at least as many questions as it answered about the accident off the Shetlands that resulted in the death of eight persons.
Maritime inspector Nils-Ivar Sørdal had his debut in the position for the nearly 11-hour hearing.
"All material from the maritime inquiry will be given to the commission. In my opinion the inquiry provided much valuable information that will be very helpful in the investigative commission's further work," Sørdal said.
One question that will need to be answered is why the "Bourbon Dolphin", which was to have been an assisting vessel, operated as the main vessel during the anchoring operation on the drilling rig Transocean Rather. It remains unknown who made this decision, and why.
The captain responsible for the other anchor handling vessel, "Highland Valour", owned by Gulf Offshore and registered in London, was not present at the hearing. The person in charge of the operation aboard the Transocean Rather, owned by the world's largest drilling company Transocean, was absent.
"The inquiry aimed to question some of the survivors as quickly after the accident as possible. If we were to bring the companies mentioned here in it would be necessary to take more time," Sørdal told news agency NTB.
The first mate of the "Bourbon Dolphin" testified to a range of errors and failures during the operation. The "Highland Valour" reportedly pulled the anchor chain in the opposite direction requested, and that this was not the first time the London registered vessel had made mistakes.
The "Bourbon Dolphin" also appeared to have non-functioning emergency equipment and there have been questions raised about the vessel's stability.
http://www.aftenposten.no/english/local/article1758077.ece