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CRUISING TO DEATH
international |
environment |
opinion/analysis
Wednesday January 18, 2012 05:59 by alf.co
Greed prompts ship owners to offer more daring and more spectacular voyages for their customers like the promise to view Venice at sunrise from the decks, a major promotional asset. CRUISING TO DEATH
By Uli Schmetzer
www.uli-schmetzer.com
January 16,2012 - Photos of the crippled cruise ship Costa Concordia on its side reminded me of a morning a few years ago when I stood at a window of the Doge’s Palace on San Mark’s watching a seven storey tall cruise ship slither past. The gigantic vessel was so close we could see the faces of the passengers on deck frantically filming and photographing.
Next to me an elderly professor shook his head. “There goes an ecological catastrophe in-the-making,” he sighed. Then he went back to the podium to chair a U.N. seminar on environmental perils.
The tragedy of the Costa Concordia has been as much in-the- making as the probability that one of the average eight giant cruise ships that pass through the center of Venice every day from April to November will eventually ram into what is the world’s most delicate urban habitat.
Greed prompts ship owners to offer more daring and more spectacular voyages for their customers like the promise to view Venice at sunrise from the decks, a major promotional asset. In Venice itself the greed of merchants and port workers accepts the dangers and the damage the cruise ships cause when their passing churns up the lagoon’s sea floor and diesel fumes (from running generators around the clock while the vessel is moored) have given Venice, a city without traffic, a higher pollution emission than its traffic jammed neighbor cities.
Greed to cut costs by selecting a shorter route prompted the captain of the Italian container vessel Rena to cut through –and founder – on New Zealand’s Astrolobe Reef spilling its oil on protected marine life and vegetation. And it was greed and the promise of a bonus perhaps that prompted the captain of a Chinese oil tanker to seek a short route home through Australia’s pristine Great Barrier Reef. He ran into rocks and spilled his cargo of oil across a maritime reserve marked world heritage and banned to all commercial shipping.
Laws of the Sea are still vague and once offshore, maritime vessels have entered ‘a lawless’ void so complicated even pirates are often returned to their home countries rather then lose their custody to expensive haggling over nebulous sea regulations. A vessel’s ownership and country of registration can be hidden in a mishmash of documents, a series of holding companies and countries like Liberia, Panama and some of the Caribbean nations that offer advantageous minimal tax registration deals. Crews are recruited for little money from poor nations with training certificates often faked or purchased on the black market, one reason why crews often have no idea how to react in an emergency.
The Costa Concordia tragedy falls into the category of attracting customers. The cruise ship went far too close to Giglio, an island jewel off the Italian coast, perhaps as a dare, perhaps to give its passengers a chance to wave to the islanders. A rock spur opened the Costa Concordia like a can opener. Four thousand people were shipwrecked, some died some were injured. And not even the most sophisticated technology could prevent the disaster because computers, after all, simply follow human orders.
The excuse the rock was not chartered sounds silly given the boast the vessel had the most sophisticated technology aboard and was virtually unsinkable.
Wasn’t there a similar claim before the Titanic sank?
ends
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