Interesting picture. Recovery of ship that sank off Gibraltar.

penfold

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Why a they cleaning it if it is going to be scrapped.
Does not make sense to me.
IIRC because of where it sank it's the responsibility of Gibraltar port authority, so it's all being done "by the book"; the article linked to above outlines what's happening, as opposed to the usual 'stuff it up a beach and chop it to bits' scrapping it's proceeding to avoid as much pollution as is reasonable.
 

Neeves

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There is an argument that scrapping the majority of most of the world's redundant shipping on a very few beaches focusses pollution to a limited area.

What is now needed, as these locations are all known and documented, is a bit of management (cheaper than trying to control hundreds of smaller locations). Try forcing the worlds ship owner to contribute....

I visited one of these scrap yards/beaches - they host a huge range of service providers and retailers. If you want 400 perfectly legal life jackets cheap - I know where to get them, ships ladders, same.

Jonathan
 

penfold

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There's no excuse for it; there are enough facilities around the world where the tonnage could be dismantled responsibly, it's just a function of the IMO being a plaything of shipowners that beaches are used, the environment befouled and workers routinely maimed and killed.
 

Refueler

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You want an honest comment about IMO ?

They are unable in attitude and capability to do anything .... they are typical bureaucratic over admin'd body that spends more time looking up its own ******* than getting job done.
 
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