Selasa, 11 Juni 2024

Port of Baltimore ship channel reopens after Key Bridge collapse - BBC.com

Baltimore shipping channel reopens after bridge collapse

The large cargo ship the Dali moves from the Francis Scott Key Bridge

The Port of Baltimore shipping channel has fully reopened, 11 weeks after the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed when it was struck by a cargo ship.

The US Army Corps of Engineers said the passageway where the Key Bridge buckled was now "safe for transit".

The 700ft (213m) wide and 50ft (15m) deep channel has been restored to its original operational dimensions.

The Dali ship veered into the span on 26 March, cutting off the shipping artery and killing six construction workers.

Crews have had to remove 50,000 tonnes of wreckage, the US Army Corps of Engineers said.

Some 2,000 salvage responders, including hundreds of specialists from around the world, worked to remove the heap of steel and concrete with the help of a fleet of tugboats and more than a dozen floating cranes.

Baltimore District Commander Col Estee Pinchasin said in a statement: "Although the overarching goal to restore full operational capacity to the Federal Channel was successful, each day we thought of those who lost their lives, their families and the workers impacted by this tragic event."

The crash left the vessel trapped under the wreckage in the Patapsco river.

Last month, the Dali was moved by tugboats, marking one of the last steps needed to clear up shipping routes before Monday's reopening.

The FBI and US Coast Guard are investigating the incident.

Last month the National Transportation Safety Board said the Dali lost power several times before it rammed into the bridge.

Rebuilding the span will take more than four years and cost up to $1.9bn (£1.5bn), state authorities in Maryland have said.

Adblock test (Why?)



from U.S. - Latest - Google News https://ift.tt/m9781hN
via IFTTT

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar

Hochul Brings Back Congestion Pricing Plan at $9 Rate Instead of $15 - The New York Times

[unable to retrieve full-text content] Hochul Brings Back Congestion Pricing Plan at $9 Rate Instead of $15    The New York Times Hochul ...