An intensive dawn-to-dark search on Saturday turned up a life ring, but no other sign of a cargo ship with 33 people on board that lost power and communications off the southeastern Bahamas during Hurricane Joaquin.
US Coast Guard and US Navy aircraft covered a large expanse of the Atlantic Ocean near Crooked Island for El Faro, which was taking on water as it was battered by massive waves at the height of the hurricane. The search was halted at nightfall and was expected to resume yesterday.
Authorities do not yet know what happened to the ship or whether the discovery of the life ring means that the crew were forced to abandon the vessel, US Coast Guard spokesman Chief Petty Officer Ryan Doss said in Miami.
“There are plenty of instances where things get torn off a ship in heavy winds,” Doss said. “It even happens to coast guard cutters.”
The life ring was spotted 193km northeast of Crooked Island, about 113km from the last known position of El Faro before authorities lost contact with it on Thursday as Joaquin raged through that section of the Bahamas as a powerful category 4 hurricane.
TOTE Maritime Puerto Rico, the operator of the ship, said in a statement that it told family members of the crew, who gathered at a union hall in Jacksonville, Florida, that they should not be discouraged by the discovery of the life ring and that it will help the coast guard with the search.
“While this reflects that the ship was caught in rough seas and extreme weather, it is in no way indicative of the ship’s fate,” the company said. “Small items such as life rings and life jackets are lost at sea frequently, particularly in rough weather.”
El Faro was heading from Jacksonville, Florida, to San Juan, Puerto Rico, when it ran into trouble. It was being battered by winds of more than 210kph and waves of up to 9m. The crew reported it had taken on water and was listing 15o, but said it was “manageable,” according to the company. That was the last it was heard from.
El Faro departed on Tuesday, when Joaquin was still a tropical storm, with 28 crew members from the US and five from Poland. The company described them as experienced and “more than equipped to handle situations such as changing weather.”
The weather has improved now that Joaquin has moved to the northeast, away from the Bahamas on a path toward Bermuda, but high seas and heavy winds were still making it difficult to search.
The vessel carried 685 containers and had a distress radio beacon on board. An initial ping was received on Thursday morning, but no new ones have followed as coast guard helicopters and C-130 airplanes and navy P-8 aircraft scan from the skies.
As the threat of the storm receded on a path that would take it away from the US, people in the southeastern Bahamas were in cleanup mode. Joaquin destroyed houses, uprooted trees and unleashed heavy flooding as it hurled torrents of rain.
Officials said it would take time to come up with a complete assessment of the damage to private property and infrastructure.
An elderly man died on the Bahama’s Long Island during the hurricane, but it has not yet been determined if the storm caused his death, Bahamian National Emergency Management Agency director Captain Stephen Russell said.
Late on Saturday night, the storm was centered about 620km southwest of Bermuda and was moving northeast at 31kph. It had maximum sustained winds of 215kph, according to the US National Hurricane Center.
The storm is expected to lose strength in coming days, but a tropical storm warning and a hurricane watch were issued for Bermuda.
The eye of Joaquin was expected to pass west of Bermuda yesterday, but the storm might still veer closer to the nation, forecasters warned.
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