ID :
115961
Sat, 04/10/2010 - 23:37
Auther :

Ship comes close to disaster in Brisbane

A Brisbane shipping pilot has averted a possible disaster by bringing the
out-of-control cruise liner Pacific Dawn to a stop before she reached the Gateway
Bridge.
Brisbane Marine Pilots Captain Peter Liley was at the helm of the 245m-long Pacific
Dawn on Saturday morning when the liner lost all power and steering just 700m away
from the six-lane bridge over the Brisbane River.
Two tugboats got the Pacific Dawn under control, bringing her to a complete
standstill 70m shy of the bridge, which is 1.6km long and 64.5m high.
"I managed to stop the ship before we got to the Gateway," Capt Liley told AAP.
"I was piloting the ship and we lost all propulsion.
"It's unusual, but we are trained for these sorts of things.
"If it was under the Gateway we could have drifted clear, but it was before the
Gateway."
Capt Liley said a ship without power was prone to drift, and there was a danger it
could not be stopped before hitting the bridge's pylons.
He said the ship's captain was investigating what caused the fault, saying he
believed a fuse had been affected by a saltwater leak.
"There's an investigation into what occurred," he told AAP.
"We used two tugs to pull the ship up, and we pulled up before the Gateway."
"We waited on the chief engineer on what services he could provide, but he couldn't
provide any services so we devised a plan to take the `dead' ship back to Hamilton."
A spokesman for Carnival Australia, which operates the Pacific Dawn, said the cruise
liner had suffered power problems but the fault was not a major one and she would
set sail again on Saturday afternoon.
"It was a temporary loss of power," the spokesman said.
"It was a controlled situation.
"The ship is OK and will set off for a South Pacific cruise today."


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