Puneet Varma (Editor)

MV Lisco Gloria

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Operator
  
2003–2010 DFDS Lisco

Ordered
  
31 March 1999

Launched
  
27 January 2001

Beam
  
23 m

Route
  
Kiel–Klaipėda

Construction started
  
7 June 1999

Length
  
197 m

Builder
  
Szczecin

MV Lisco Gloria httpsimagesvesseltrackercomimagesvesselsmi

Name
  
Launched as Golfo Dei Coralli 2002–2003 Dana Gloria 2003–2010 Lisco Gloria

Owner
  
2002 Bank Polska Kasa Opieki S.A., Poland 2002 DFDS Tor Line A/S, Denmark 2002–2010 DFDS A/S, Denmark

Port of registry
  
5/2002–7/2002 Olbia,  Italy 7/2002 – 2003 Copenhagen,  Denmark 6/2003– Klaipėda,  Lithuania

MV Lisco Gloria was a ROPAX ferry, sailing under a Lithuanian flag for the shipowner DFDS Seaways. An explosive fire engulfed the ship while en route to Klaipėda on 9 October 2010.

Contents

Specifications

MV Lisco Gloria Lisco Days Related Keywords amp Suggestions Lisco Days Long Tail

The ship was built in 2001 at the Szczecin Shipyard as the Golfo Dei Coralli for the shipowner Lloyd Sardegna Compagnia Di Navigazione from Olbia in Italy. She was however not delivered, but instead bought by DFDS on 19 July 2002, and was sailed under a Danish flag as the Dana Gloria. During this time she sailed on the route from Harwich to Esbjerg as the replacement for Dana Anglia.

MV Lisco Gloria The ferry site

In June 2003 she was in turn replaced by her sister ship, the Dana Sirena, that also sailed under a Danish flag and provided facilities for 600 instead of 308 passengers. The ship was later transferred to Rasa Multipurpose Shipping, Klaipėda, renamed Lisco Gloria and sailed for DFDS Lisco (incorporated into DFDS Seaways in 2010) on the route between Klaipėda and Kiel. The ship had sailed under a Lithuanian flag since 1 June 2003.

2010 fire

MV Lisco Gloria MV Lisco Gloria Wikipedia

On 9 October 2010, the ship was on its way from Kiel to Klaipėda, carrying 204 passengers and 32 crewmembers, mostly Lithuanian citizens. Just after midnight, as the ship was travelling in the Fehmarn Belt, some 8–10 km south of Lolland, an onboard explosion occurred on the car deck, which resulted in a fire that later engulfed the entire ship. Being in the zone of German responsibility, all passengers and crew were rescued from the ferry by the German Coast Guard and some smaller vessels that had hurried to the scene, and transferred to other ferries, most of them on board the Deutschland. 3 persons, that had inhaled smoke were transferred to a hospital by helicopters. The German Coast Guard said that the incident showed no signs of being a terrorist attack. The ship later drifted into Danish waters and the Danish Coast Guard dispatched an oil containment vessel to the site because Lisco Gloria had some 200 tons of fuel oil on board. A German team managed to enter the ship and released the anchor. However, officials said that it was almost impossible to put out the fire and concentrated on cooling the hull to prevent her from sinking. In the morning she listed at 15 degrees. After the fire she was first towed to Odense, Denmark, where she was declared to be a constructive total loss. On 16 February 2011 she began her final journey to Klaipėda where her scrapping was expected to take five months. However, before the scrapping took place the new owner investigated whether the ship could be repaired despite having been declared constructive total loss due to expected repair costs exceeding DKK 450 million. The scrapping began in 2011 and the demolition of the ship was reportedly finished in by early 2012.

MV Lisco Gloria ship Lisco Gloria burn and still not sink YouTube

References

MV Lisco Gloria Wikipedia