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SMIT Team Arrives at Decaying FSO Safer in Red Sea

Posted on May 31, 2023

A SMIT salvage team has arrived on site of the decayingย FSO Saferย in the Red Sea where they will begin the operation to remove over one million barrels of oil from the vessel.

SMIT Salvage, a subsidiary of Dutch maritime services company Boskalis, signed an agreement with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in April for the operation.

Th oil removal phase is being carried out by crews on board Boskalisโ€™ multi-purpose cable laying vesselย Ndeavor, which arrived at the site on Tuesday. The operation from here will involve an initial onsite inspection before transferring the oil toย a UN-purchasedย Very Large Crude Carrier (VLCC), namedย Nautica, whichย is standing by in Djibouti before traveling to the site next month and receive the oil.

David Gressly, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Yemen, has been leading the UN-led effort to remove oil from the vessel.

โ€œAfter 2 years of political groundwork, fundraising and UNDP project development, the operation on the water is set to begin!โ€ Gressly tweeted Tuesday.

FSO Saferย has been described as a โ€œticking time bomb.โ€ The rusting floating storage facility has been anchored just a few miles off the Yemen coast for more than 30 years, but offloading and maintenance stopped in 2015 following the start of the war in Yemen, putting the vessel at serious risk of breaking up and spilling the 1.14 million barrels of crude oil that remain inside.

The UN has warned that a major spill would devastate fishing communities on Yemenโ€™s Red Sea coast, impacting the livelihoods of some 200,000 instantly. The cost of cleanup alone is estimated at $20 billion, while disruptions to shipping through the Bab al-Mandab strait to the Suez Canal could cost billions more in global trade losses every day.

Boskalis said previously that the on-site oil operation is expected to take about two months.

โ€œToday marks a critical step in the operation to remove the threat posed by theย FSO Safer,โ€ said UN Development Programme Administrator Achim Steiner. โ€œWith the marine salvage support vesselย Ndeavorย onsite, the project can now begin in earnest. This marks the culmination of tremendous amounts of work and coordination among UN agencies, maritime lawyers, oil spill experts and many more.โ€

The FSO Safer pictured May 30, 2023.

The UN warns that although the oil transfer averts the worst-case scenario of a spill of 1 million barrels, theย Saferย will still hold a considerable amount of residual oil, posing a significant environmental threat to the Red Sea.

The project also remains underfunded, with $29 million still needed, including to safely moor the replacement vessel to a catenary anchor leg mooring buoy and towing theย Saferย to a green recycling yard.

โ€œWith this in mind, we call again upon the international community and private sector to step up and support us to close the funding gap on the project so that we can finish what we have started,โ€ said Steiner.

โ€œMember states, private companies and the general public have contributed $114 million to stop the Red Sea Spill, and so many other partners that have contributed expertise and advocated for this critical operation,โ€ said Gressly.

โ€œThis is a great milestone, but we will not rest easy until the operation is completed,โ€ he added.

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