To main content

KOEM Kyung Shin

Emergency response

Call SMIT 24/7 at
+31 10 454 99 11
salvage@smit.com


Help us to help you.
Keep the following information at hand when you contact us in case of an emergency:
Initial info:
What? Where? When?

Type and cause of accident:
Fire – collision - grounding

Known damage:
What is the known damage? Where is it located?

Contact details:
Which contact details can we use at all times?

The task was to remove oil from the wreck of the tanker ‘Kyung Shin’. This tanker went down many years ago off the country’s south east coast, in a water depth approaching 100 m.

Oil recovery from casualties and wrecks is a major environmental service provided by SMIT Salvage. Recent operations of this type include a contract with the Korean Government agency KOEM (Korea Marine Environment Management Corporation).

Remove oil from 100 m water depth
The task was to remove oil from the wreck of the tanker ‘Kyung Shin'. This tanker went down many years ago off the country's south east coast, in a water depth approaching 100 m. The crane barge ‘Smit Borneo' was mobilised as the surface platform for this operation. The spread included a saturation spread and team, hot-tap equipment (for pumping from the submerged tanks) and a newly designed tank heating system. The operation recovered about 500 tonnes of HFO from the vessel's tanks.

Tanker sank in 1988
The Korean fuel oil tanker ‘Kyung Shin' sank in 1988. She was lost in the Sea of Japan, close to the South Korean port of Pohang. Given the depth of the wreck, it was decided not to remove the vessel. However, action was taken to reduce the environmental threat.

Persistent oil seepage
Nevertheless, over the years there has been persistent oil seepage from this wreck. The leakage was small, but KOEM carried out a risk analysis, taking into account the possibility of a larger scale release of oil from the ‘Kyung Shin'. It was at this point that the Korean authorities approached SMIT Salvage, an organisation with a solid track record for successful oil recovery.

Wreck inspection
During 2010 KOEM contracted SMIT Salvage for the task of carrying out a wreck inspection. In response, the crane barge ‘Smit Borneo' and the multipurpose tug ‘Smit Angola' were mobilised. The spread included a saturation diving system and other specialised equipment, to take account of the depth at which the inspection would be performed.

Detailed pollutant recovery plan
The diving team surveyed the wreck, measured the volumes remaining in each tank and took samples. Several compartments were found to contain various grades of fuel oil. This information was then used to develop a detailed pollutantrecovery plan. The plan was accepted and SMIT Salvage was then awarded a contract to remove the oil during the summer of 2011.Specialised equipment‘Smit Borneo' was prepared for this task. The vessel was fitted out with equipment from SMIT's warehouse in Rotterdam, including a hot-tap system, boilers, heat-exchangers and special pumps and hoses. Meanwhile, the SMIT Subsea SAT-3 saturation diving system was mobilisedfrom Dubai.Success factor the right temperature‘Smit Borneo' and 80 tbp tug ‘Union Boxer', departed Singapore in early June for this oil recovery, which proved to be something of a technical tour de force. One crucial success factor involved producing the correct temperatures for optimum pumping of the various fuel oil grades. This was achieved by the use of warm water heating, to reach the required temperature for pumping. Spiral heat exchangers were inserted into each tank, by means of the hot-tap system. When oil reached the surface, it was passed through an oil-water separator. During the operation, completed on July 10, a total of 12 tanks were emptied.

Related projects

Selected filters
Flaminia053.jpg

MSC Flaminia

One very high profile case that generated a lot of press coverage was the salvage operation of the 6,732TEU container vessel 'MSC Flaminia'. Whilst transiting the Atlantic Ocean for Antwerp on the 14th of July a fire broke out in one of its holds, which sadly eventually resulted in three fatalities. After the remaining crew had been rescued, the focus shifted to salvaging the vessel.

Flash_2012

Flash

On the 25th of June the bulk carrier 'Flash' ran aground near the Galite Islands. The unfortunate vessel was loaded with a cargo of about 130,000t of coal. Immediately SMIT Salvage mobilized a team of experts to render assistance.

Vega_S-1

Vega Sagittarius

At high tide on the 16th of August the general cargo vessel 'Vega Sagittarius' ran aground close to Nuuk, Greenland. The vessel breached all her double bottoms and came to rest with a 6° list on multiple rock pinnacles. Her stern was in deep water but her bow protruded from the sea during low tide and well above the low water mark during high tide. As a result of the tides, the vessel would be pounded on the rocks during high tide when the stern became buoyant. Due to the severity of the damage and instability caused by its position on the rocks, the vessel was partially evacuated.

Stolt_valor

Stolt Valor

Early on 15 March, the products chemical tanker ‘Stolt Valor’ suffered a midships fire and explosion whilst proceeding in the Arabian Gulf. SMIT Salvage was awarded a Lloyd’s Open Form by her owners and organised a large and decisive response. SMIT mobilised five tugs, various (fire-fighting and pumping ) equipment and a strong salvage team, including a marine chemist.

Gelso_M_bewerkt_DSC_1984b

Gelso M

During a violent storm chemical product tanker ‘Gelso M’ lost main propulsion and was lost on the rocks of Capo Santo Panagio, Sicily. SMIT Salvage in cooperation with local partner Augustea mobilised a salvage team and tug, anti-pollution equipment.

Bremen_3

TK Bremen

During a severe winterstorm at the Atlantique, the vessel ’TK Bremen’, anchored south off Lorient, drifted and beached at the coast of Erdeven, France.

KOEM Kyung Shin