Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Sparta (ship)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Sparta

Port of registry
  
Sovetskaya Gavan

Draught
  
3.34 metres (11.0 ft)

Launched
  
10 January 1988

Weight
  
890.1 tons

Draft
  
3.34 m

Owner
  
Antaeus

Height
  
3.7 metres (12 ft)

Capacity
  
286 tons

Length
  
48 m

Displacement
  
794,700 kg

Beam
  
8.8 m

The Sparta is a 48-metre (157-foot) Russian-flagged fishing trawler and refrigerator ship.

Ross Sea accident

On 16 December 2011 the Sparta sent out a distress signal after it struck a submerged iceberg while fishing for Antarctic cod in the Ross Sea. The accident left the vessel holed below the waterline and sinking close to the Ross Ice Shelf and approximately 2,000 nautical miles (3,700 km) south-east of New Zealand. The Royal New Zealand Air Force twice sent Hercules aircraft on seven-hour flights from Christchurch to air-drop equipment. (The planes had to refuel at McMurdo Station in Antarctica before returning to base.) The air-drops allowed the 32-man crew to pump out the flooded hold, make temporary repairs and stabilise the listing ship.

Pack ice meant nearby vessels such as the Norwegian Seljevaer and the Sparta's Russian sister ship Chiyo Maru 3 were unable to come to Sparta's aid. The crew of the Sparta, made up of 16 Indonesians, 15 Russians and a Ukrainian researcher, had to wait until 26 December 2011 when the South Korean icebreaker RV Araon arrived. One of the Araon's first tasks was to pump fuel into the raised side of the Sparta, thus lifting the damaged hull and exposing it to the air. The hole was patched with a concrete box, after which the ship was deemed seaworthy. The Araon cleared a path through the ice for the Sparta to follow into open waters, to rejoin her sister ship and sail to New Zealand for repairs.

With the ship's fate in the balance, biologist David Ainley had criticised the system of fishing permits that allowed "underpowered, single-hulled boats" to operate in the area and the costs involved in rescuing them. Ecologist Alexei Knishkikov added his concern for local marine wildlife, should any of the Sparta's 200 tons of light fuel oil leak into the sea. In the event, only a little hydraulic oil spilled into the water.

References

Sparta (ship) Wikipedia