Oostzee (1980)
The Oostzee was a Dutch coaster on which a serious toxic accident occurred on the Lower Elbe in July 1989.
History
1980 to 1989
The ship was built in 1980 at the Martin-Jansen shipyard in Leer/Ostfriesland, with the hull number 163 as the Oostzee for the Rotterdam shipping company Noordlijn, a subsidiary of the Haren-Emser shipping company Intersee Schiffahrtsgesellschaft. From 1981 to 1983 the ship was operated as Savonia under the management of Intersee and then sold by Noordlijn to the company "Noordzee" in Delfzijl, which operated it again in the following years under the management of Scheepvaartbedrijf Noordlijn, Emmen under the name Oostzee.Poison accident in 1989
In July 1989, the Oostzee was on a voyage from Rotterdam through the Kiel Canal to Leningrad. The cargo in the ship's hold included barbed wire, silica sand, zinc ingots and 3913 barrels containing about 850 tons of epichlorohydrin. On the voyage from Rotterdam to the Elbe, the freighter encountered bad weather, during which some of the dangerous goods barrels slipped. In the process, about 40 barrels leaked. At the time, Günter Hollmann, a member of the "Oostzee" crisis team, said that improper storage of the toxic barrels was to blame. Contrary to the regulations, the barrels had been placed directly on the floor of the ship and had not been stacked properly.On July 18, 1989, the ship arrived at the Kiel Canal, where it was prevented from continuing its voyage due to cargo damage that had already resulted in a chloroform-like odor on board. First the ship was referred to the Neuwerk roadstead and the crew was rescued.
Consideration was given to taking the ship to the manufacturing company Dow Chemical in Bützfleth, to Hamburg or to Cuxhaven, which was rejected in each case due to the proximity to residential areas.Ultimately, the Oostzee was taken to the Elbe port in Brunsbüttel to discharge the damaged cargo. The corresponding work lasted for more than three weeks and resulted in a number of accidents due to a lack of protection against the extremely harmful epichlorohydrin and its compounds.
As a result, numerous aid workers, police officers and sailors became ill and died of cancer.