Friday, January 27, 2012

Ruminations



Captain Schettino arrived on the bridge when the ship was about four nautical miles from Giglio off the Tuscan coast and switched to manual navigation in order to perform a close-up "salute" to a retired captain, Mario Palombo, living on the island.

The Captain's testimony before Italian authorities describing the situation just before the accident, translated here:

SCHIUMA A PRUA (foam astearn at 21.42 while the ship is sailing at 15, 16 knots...radar was not pinging..... the order of the captain to avoid the obstacle came 40 seconds too late .............. )
Sono le 21.42. Dice Schettino: "All'improvviso vidi a prua la schiuma sulla superficie dell'acqua e capii che c'era uno scoglio che il radar non mi batteva". La Concordia, in quel momento viaggia tra i 15 e i 16 nodi e la manovra per evitare l'ostacolo è disperata. E tardiva. "Quaranta secondi di troppo". "Ordinai la virata d'emergenza a dritta".

Approaching close to land in the dark of night, at high speed, and without the aid of radar, can only be described as an act of recklessness.  One might question his sobriety at the time.

We should also question the lack of his bridge watch officers objecting to his actions.  Unfortunately, at this time we have seen no interviews with the ship's seaman and engineering personnel.

However, once realizing the danger ahead, it would seem hard to fault the Captain's subsequent actions to safely control his vessel, ultimately leading to her grounding, preventing the vessel sinking off-shore.

Shortly after turning left, he lost all propulsion, however, he was not aware of the situation in his engineering spaces which were in the process of flooding out.  I would believe that the engineering Main Control Room flooded also, as it appears he no longer had communication with the Engineering Watch Officer having to send a senior Mate below to assess the situation.

 Schettino said he made an emergency maneuver after hitting the rocks to prevent the vessel from heading out to sea and sinking.

Once he realized that he no longer commanded full control of his ship, he was in a situation called in the Navigation Rules, as a vessel not under command.

The International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea define that a “vessel not under command,”  meaning a vessel which through some exceptional circumstance is unable to manoeuvre as required by these Rules and is therefore unable to keep out of the way of another vessel.

Captain Konrad's in his narrative states that once he was clear of the rocks and has suffered a loss of power, the Captain should have declared Mayday.

This would have included sounding the general alarm, transmitted over the emergency radio frequency, proceed to anchor, and set the abandon ship procedure for passengers.  However, at this point, he was still proceeding northwards at a speed of 8.2 knots, much too fast to drop the hook.

The Navigation Rules for vessels in International Waters proscribe these signals:

ANNEX IV - Distress signals

1. The following signals, used or exhibited either together or separately, indicate distress and need of assistance:
(a) a gun or other explosive signal fired at intervals of about a minute;
(b) a continuous sounding with any fog-signalling apparatus;
(c) rockets or shells, throwing red stars fired one at a time at short intervals;
(d) a signal made by radiotelegraphy or by any other signalling method consisting of the group   . . .   — — —   . . .   (SOS) in the Morse Code;
(e) a signal sent by radiotelephony consisting of the spoken word “Mayday”;
(f) the International Code Signal of distress indicated by NC;
(g) a signal consisting of a square flag having above or below it a ball or anything resembling a ball;
(h) flames on the vessel (as from a burning tar barrel, oil barrel, etc);
(i) a rocket parachute flare or a hand flare showing a red light;
(j) a smoke signal giving off orange-coloured smoke;
(k) slowly and repeatedly raising and lowering arms outstretched to each side;
(l) a distress alert by means of digital selective calling (DSC) transmitted on
(i) VHF channel 70, or
(ii) MF/HF on the frequencies 2187.5 kHz, 8414.5 kHz, 4207.5 kHz, 6312 kHz, 12577 kHz or 16804.5 kHz;
(m) a ship-to-shore distress alert transmitted by the ship’s Inmarsat or other mobile satellite service provider ship earth station;
(n) approved signals transmitted by radiocommunication systems, including survival craft radar transponders.

However, the Captain is further reported to say, "La regola d'oro: mai il mayday" (golden rule: never use "Mayday"  at least not until the sitation is truly desperate.

Shortly thereafter, he applied right rudder to head out to sea perhaps to avoid grounding at this high rate of speed.  Without propulsion he soon lost rudder control with his ship heading in a north east direction but his motion over the ground being northward.  He was thus crabbing northward loosing speed rapidly as he proceeded north due to the massive hull resistance presented.

He has been highly criticized at not loading and launching the lifeboats earlier.  However, I would not believe it prudent to try shipping lifeboats with the ship still in motion.  Although seaman man the lifeboats, I would believe their training to be with the ship in port, at rest, not in any dynamic way and perhaps not skillful in dealing with a moving mother ship.

Lifeboats dropped on the port side in the path of the ship would be liable to being overturned or crushed by the ship or the wave motion being developed, those on the starboard side on reaching water level, would be moving away from the ship making unshackling the fall lines difficult and subjecting the boat to being hauled over. Or, they could be sucked into the ships hull from the sideways motion of the ship.

I would believe launching the lifeboats with way on the ship to be unthinkable at this early time.  We furthermore, have no information on the sea state at the time.

While drifting northward, the ship was in water over 300 feet, probably too deep for anchoring.  Also, the extent of flooding was not fully understood, and the potential of sinking was apparently not considered imminent.

A little over a mile north of grazing the outcropping, speed over the ground had decreased to the point where the Captain appears to have activated his port bow thruster enabling the ship to reverse it's movement north, turning southward where the current set the ship heading in towards the island.

Not heading inland would have resulted with the ship continuing seaward, not a prudent action knowing that the ship was holed and progress of internal flooding unknown.

Ultimately, the ship grounded with a list to starboard of about 20°.  At this time, the Captain was said to have commanded abandon ship.

Abandon ship procedures were instituted.  What transpired thereafter has not been well understood with much misunderstanding portrayed by the press of ineptitude of the crew.  The interval of time before the ship heeled over completely to starboard has not be established, to my knowledge.

The bottom line however, is that we now know that there were 3,216 passengers and 1,013 crew members aboard the COSTA CONCORDIA for a total of 4,229 souls. As this is written 13 bodies have been recovered while another 19 are missing and presumed lost. "Considering the circumstances it seems amazing that more lives were not lost in the darkness and confusion of the capsizing ship."

Over 99% of the souls aboard survived.  I believe the much maligned ship's crew has to be credited with this remarkable statistic.

Here are a few pictures taken during evacuation process, have no idea of times.


Listing 10°  Passengers to the left appear to be shoe horning themselves into a lifeboat.


Listing 16°


Starboard side boat station #27, believe we're looking forward.  

The Staff Captain and his Security Officer may have begun the evacuation process prior to the abandon ship command.


Midships port side boat hung up at a ship's list of 25°.  Launching systems are designed for up to 20° list.

View of the interior of a life boat.



Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Abandon Ship

"When a drill is held in port, as many as possible of the lifeboats should be cleared and swung out. Each lifeboat should be launched and manoeuvred in the water at least once every three months. Where launching of free-fall lifeboats is impracticable, they may be lowered into the water provided that they are free-fall launched at least once every six months."

Here the ship is moored to it's starboard side which allows the port side boats to be exercised.  At a later port, the ship will moor to the opposite, port side, allowing the starbord boats to be tested.




Here we have the Serenade of the Seas in St. Thomas, USVI, working it's starboard boats.


Capacity of these boats is 150 passangers all with life vests along with one or more ship's crew.  Note the coxswain showing his helmet through the aft hatch.

Passangers assembling at lifeboat stations following the Abandon Ship announcement.


Port side boat station No. 6  

       
         Starboard side boat station No. 5

  Note, the vessel appears at this point to be on an even keel.


Awaiting their turn to disembark


Holding on


Another view


Entering Lifeboat


Lifeboat interior 



Most of the starboard side lifeboats have been launched.  Here the ship is listing to starboard 20° and 4° down by the stern.


It appears in this shot that all starboard side lifeboats have been launched and most have departed the scene.

When the ship keeled over to it's present position is not yet known.


Of the 13 lifeboats to port, three were not able to be deployed before the starboard list became too great.
Also shown are three inflatable life rafts which are normally stored uninflated in metal cannisters. 


Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Timeline Updated

  "I was navigating by sight because I knew the depths well and I have done this manoeuvre three or four times . . .  but this time I ordered the turn to late and I ended up in water that was too shallow. It don't know why it happened. . . I was a victim of my instincts."


Approaching Le Scole rocks on a heading of 351°, speed 15.5 knots (18 mph)

21:44 - Fast translation from his testimony - " . . .  foam astearn . . . while the ship is sailing at 15, 16 knots...radar was not pinging..... the order of the captain to avoid the obstacle came 40 seconds too late..."

I looked to the bow and saw waves breaking," he said in testimony leaked yesterday. "I saw the foam on the water. I realised the bow was heading for the rock and at that point I turned the helm completely to the right, stopping the engines and then I ordered full steam backwards."

         This assement was posted an another site by Bob Theriault on January 22, 2012 " . . . seems possible that the 300 meter long ship pivoted on its center of lateral plane as a result of a hard turn to starboard. This will result in the ship continuing along the original path for some time while the bow moves to the right, and the stern moves to the left (skids). At some point the skid turns into the desired path, but for a while the ship will see the stern moving to the left where it can then hit the rock at an angle. The stabilizer is shown deployed and not damaged. That would indicate an angular contact with the rock aft of the stabilizer, as would occur in a skid. The stabilizer may have also been deployed after the collision. Windage may have also caused the stern to fall off to port in the attempted turn. He just cut it too close for a boat that big and with that silly amount of windage."

 - Ship impacts rock.  Once he understood that he had grazed an outcropping to port, his immediate response was to turn hard to port to swing his stern away from the rock.  Point of impact, speed had been reduced to about 13.3 kts.


  
      Starboard rudder applied too late           Stern pivoting into rocks             Hard left rudder applied

       Within five minutes, lighting is lost throughout the ship.  This would indicate that the engineering plant had been flooded resulting in loss of propulsion power.  Many passengers begin to panic. Crew reassure passengers that nothing is wrong.

21:48 - Once he had cleared that area he reversed his rudder to starboard to head away from the shore,  back out toward open water in order to slow it down, normally the ship would reverse engines, but with no power at this point, the captain applied hard right rudder.  Speed had been reduced to 5 kts. by this time.

           With loss of the main ship's generators, emergency power sources kicked in providing limited emergency lightening throughout the ship, and power to critical navigational equipment, which we believe included the ship's rudder and bow thrusters.

          A first alarm is sounded: two long whistles and one short, informing the crew of a problem. Reports indicate that there was not a sense of urgency among much of the crew. 

          I could assume that the Engineering Main Control room was also lost to flooding and the Captain unaware of the cause of his losing communication with the Engineering Watch.

          Schettino ordered his first navigation officer, Giovanni Iaccarino, to go below and inspect the engine room.  "What I saw was terrifying," Iaccarino testified to Italian officials. "Everything was flooded and I literally had water up to my throat ... The engine section, the generators and the electricity transmission were all flooded." He alerted the bridge by shouting down an internal telephone.

     Swinging toward the beach                    Turning to seaward                    Crabbing Northwards

21:55 - Speed over the ground has slowed to 2 kts when off Gabbianara Point.  As the ship slowed down it became harder to steer, so although the turn had prevented it from crasing into Isola de Giglio, it was heading out to sea.

"Whenever you turn a ship hard over it's moving sideways, and when you're moving a large ship like that sideways through the water its going to slow down considerably."

22:05 - Forward speed 1.0 kts., broadside to track.  Ship's head begins a slow swing to starboard, perhaps assisted by the bow thrusters.

"The ship fired its port-docking thrusters - usually used for manoeuvring sideways while docking - but the hard right rudder had caused the Concordia to list to one side.

"By turning the ship across the direction of movement, the Captain used the ship as a brake to slow momentum."

"The Captain then used the bow thrusters to keep the bow of the ship pointing towards Giglio Porto."

22:06 - Ashore authorities received first alarm of problems through a passenger calling relatives

???? - Ship reached furthest point North and commences moving to the South, having traveled at most, a little over a  mile from point of initial impact.  It is unknown how long ship's backing power had been lost, however, it would seem a rather short distance for a ship of that size coming to a stop.  There is a report that he dropped the anchor and it's dragging may have contributed to reducing forward momentum.  I have seen one underwater photograph showing an anchor chain.

The captain insisted that his priority had been to manoeuvre the ship into shallow waters where an evacuation could be carried out more safely.

"I wanted the grecale [a northeast wind] to carry the ship towards the island," he said. "I ordered the anchors dropped because that would help me carry out the manoeuvre."

22:25 - Heading downstream at a speed of 0.7 kts. moving almost sideways

      Northward Movement Reversed    Crabbing Southward by Current                Grounded

The Concordia, probably pushed by the current and the docking thrusters, moved toward land.  The ship was moving almost sideways at this point.

22:26 - Communicating with the Coast Guard, Capt. Shettino admits to damage requesting but tugboat assistance only

22:26 aAt this time the Captin requested  tug boats from the Italina Coast Guard.

22:50 - At 0.5 kts., ship grounds at Gabbianara Point - 66 minutes having elapsed from initial impact

The stern of the Concordia finally struck the reef at Gabbianara point, swinging the bow to the right and pinning it against the rocks.

22:58 - Capt. Shettino orders Abandon Ship.  The “abandon ship” signal is given: seven short whistles and one long. Lifeboats begin their deployment.

Tract pictorials thanks to Captain’s John Konrad who "Narrates the Final Maneuvers of the Costa Concordia [VIDEO]"
http://gcaptain.com/gcaptains-john-konrad-narrates-the-final-maneuvers-of-the-costa-concordia-video/?37941


Monday, January 23, 2012

Nautical Chart




Nautical Chart 53135 covers the area around Isola Del Giglio


The distance from the latitude marks to the left,  42° 20' N to 42° 22' N, represents two nautical miles.


This chart shows that the Le Scole Point rock outcropping lies within the 10 Meter line.  Costa Concordia draws 8.2 Meters.  She wound up on the rocks at the point just South of Punta del Lazzaretto.


Soundings (water depth) in Meters

What Really Happened


But Schettino told a judge last week that his bosses not only knew he was going to sail perilously close to the island of Giglio — they told him to do it as a form of “advertising” for the cruise line.

“The Giglio salute on Jan 13 was planned with the company before we departed from Civitavecchia,” Schettino said, according to leaked excerpts from his 135-page statement published Sunday in the Italian newspapers La Repubblica and Il Messaggeo.

“We meant to do it the week before, but it was not possible because of bad weather,” he said.



http://news.nationalpost.com/2012/01/22/costa-concordia-death-toll-rises-to-13-as-divers-find-womans-body-near-bow-of-sunken-ship/

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Ship's Track

Here are four pictures of the track published by Captain’s John Konrad who

"Narrates the Final Maneuvers of the Costa Concordia [VIDEO]"
 GCAPTAIN STAFF on JANUARY 19, 2012
Disclaimer, we will not know the EXACT details of what happened until the Voyage Data Recorder (VDR), aka Black Box, is analyzed.





Point of impact with rock outcropping.


Here the ship has lost all headway following her collison with the rock cropping, resulting in engine room flooding and loss of power.  Now, the ship's head is swinging to starboard under the action of bow thrusters.


Still being set down by the bow thrusters, the Captain appears to be in the process of grounding the vessel.


The ship comes to rest fast to the shore.

First Person Accounts


Here we have unverified first person accounts as published today in the The Australian.  They make more sense than the sensational accounts published heretofor.

Costa Concordia captain Schettino's phone calls and inaction

BY: JOHN FOLLAIN AND JON UNGOED-THOMAS From: The Australian January 22, 2012 2:59PM
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/costa-concordia-captain-schettinos-phone-calls-and-inaction/story-fnb64oi6-1226250612022



THE cruise ship's momentum was unstoppable. About 300m long and weighing more than 114,000 tonnes, the Costa Concordia was powering towards the island of Giglio off the Tuscan coast at 15.3 knots moments before disaster struck.

The rocky shore loomed ever larger as the vessel passed as close as the captain dared on a "fly-by" salute to the islanders.

By his own account, Captain Francesco Schettino had sailed that stretch of sea at least five times before. From his radar on the bridge, he judged that the nearest rocks were 200m away. He did not see the rock that ripped a hole in the cruise ship until it was right in front of him.

"I looked to the bow and saw waves breaking," he said in testimony leaked yesterday. "I saw the foam on the water. I realised the bow was heading for the rock and at that point I turned the helm completely to the right, stopping the engines and then I ordered full steam backwards.

"I avoided the impact with the bow but the ship didn't make it and hit [the rocks] at the height of the engine room."

It was 9.42pm on Friday, January 13, when the port side was gashed, lights went out and passengers felt a rumbling thump.

Schettino ordered his first navigation officer, Giovanni Iaccarino, to go below and inspect the engine room.

"What I saw was terrifying," Iaccarino testified to Italian officials. "Everything was flooded and I literally had water up to my throat ... The engine section, the generators and the electricity transmission were all flooded." He alerted the bridge by shouting down an internal telephone.

The showboating captain's response to this grave news is now the focus of a criminal investigation that will assess what he did to protect the 4223 people on board and whether he should have done more.

By the time Schettino gave the order to abandon ship at 10.58pm, it was listing severely and some people were trapped below decks. A 12th body was recovered yesterday and 20 people are still missing.

Investigators are focusing increasingly on what happened during the crucial hour between the alert from the engine room and the order to evacuate.

Why did it take so long? And could Schettino have saved more lives?


Schettino's Giglio sail-pasts had delighted holidaymakers and islanders alike. Had he grown blase? Was he trying too hard to impress some of his guests, including a young blonde Moldovan woman?

.......

At the start of the Concordia's fatal cruise, Schettino invited a number of passengers to a cocktail party. Among them were Marco Monda, his new wife Rosetta and other honeymooning couples.

Monda, a hairdresser, noticed that Domnica Cemortan, 25, a translator and former dancer, was at the captain's side. "Cemortan behaved as if she was the captain's consort. When the ship's photographer took pictures of us and the other couples with the captain, she posed next to him," Monda said.

Investigators suspect Cemortan may have been a guest of Schettino's, although she has vigorously denied having an affair with him.

On the Friday evening, Monda spotted Schettino with Cemortan again as they walked into an invitation-only restaurant on the 11th deck of the ship, accompanied by an unidentified brunette. Schettino had his arms around both women's waists, he said.

The trio walked up to a panoramic window and stood chatting and admiring the nearby Tuscan coast.

"The captain looked like a braggart - he was acting as if he was a millionaire with these two girls," said Monda, 47, from Asti in northern Italy. "He looked very relaxed and arrogant. He was showing off."

Another Italian passenger, Angelo Fabbri, saw Schettino and Cemortan sit opposite each other for a dinner of prawn cocktails and grilled swordfish in the Club Concordia restaurant. He claimed that at least a decanter of red wine had been drunk between them.

Interviewed by The Sunday Times yesterday in Chisinau, Moldova, Cemortan, whose father drowned on a seaside holiday in Ukraine 12 years ago, said she did not think the captain had been drinking.

"I've been made out to be a temptress. It's ridiculous. I was not dating the captain," she said.

In his testimony to the judge, which appeared in the Corriere della Sera newspaper yesterday, Schettino said he had gone to the bridge at 9.30pm for the sail-past with Cemortan and Antonello Tievoli, the head waiter, whose family live close to the Giglio shoreline. Cemortan had been directed to a nearby lounge.

There were five other officers on the bridge when he took command, he said. "I moved to manual and I set a route of 0.5 - that is, to get to half a mile from the coast."

Tievoli telephoned the retired Costa captain Palombo, who also lives on the island. "I talked to Palombo about the sail-past and the sea depth," Schettino said. "I told him I had [enough] water."

Shortly after the Concordia hit the rocks, the harbourmaster's office in the Tuscan port of Livorno radioed the ship to ask: "Everything OK?" The reply was: "Affirmative."

Someone among the crew told the coastguard that the liner had suffered a "small technical failure".

But Schettino's story is that he notified Costa Cruises, his company, as soon as he heard that the engine room had flooded.

He said in his testimony that he had made his first call at 10.05pm to Roberto Ferrarini, head of the Costa Cruises crisis unit, declaring: "I've made a blunder, I went too close to the Giglio and we hit something. I'm telling you everything, I'm telling you the truth."

Investigators want to know what was said during at least 10 phone calls in all between Schettino and Ferrarini. The company declined to say whether any of the calls had been recorded.

"I'm sure I told him in real time about everything," Schettino said, "and then I asked him for helicopters and tug-boats because I thought I could repair the damage."

Corriere della Sera has reported that Costa knew the situation was extremely serious because Palombo, the retired captain, had already called its general director, Gianni Onorato, at 9.50pm. Onorato, in turn, had immediately alerted the managing director, Pier Luigi Foschi.

Foschi, however, has denied knowing how critical the situation was, blaming the captain. "Schettino lied to us and to the crew," he said.

The captain insisted that his priority had been to manoeuvre the ship into shallow waters where an evacuation could be carried out more safely.

"I wanted the grecale [a northeast wind] to carry the ship towards the island," he said. "I ordered the anchors dropped because that would help me carry out the manoeuvre."

This account was supported by Cemortan, who said: "He tried to steer the boat towards the shore as it was beginning to tilt. He said to me he wanted to take the boat closer to the shore so the lifeboats would have a better chance of making it."

Schettino said he was concerned not to create panic. Passengers were initially told only that there was an "electrical problem" that required them to return to their cabins.

As the ship began to list and panic broke out anyway, the crew continued to insist that nothing serious was wrong. In a passenger video, a female crew member tells passengers in lifejackets: "We have made an announcement in the name of our captain, we kindly ask you to return to your cabin, or if you want to, to the lounge ... Everything is under control."

Such advice may have cost several passengers their lives, among them Williams Arlotti and his daughter Dayana, 5, still missing last night.

It was left to passengers and crew to take the initiative. Several ship's officers staged what has been described as a "mutiny" to begin the evacuation without waiting for the captain's order.

No sooner had the ship beached at 10.40pm than the purser, Manrico Giampietroni, 57, scrambled to help people into lifeboats. The order to abandon ship did not come until 18 minutes later.

At midnight, he telephoned his wife Laura to say he would be all right. "He said, 'Stay calm, I am getting passengers on to lifeboats, then I will take care of myself'," she told La Stampa newspaper.

In a recorded phone call to the coastguard at 11.40pm, Schettino said all but 200 or 300 passengers and crew had left and promised that he would be the last man on board.

Yet just over an hour later, at 12.46am, the captain told the furious coastguard he was on a lifeboat. His claim that he had "fallen" into it has been widely derided. Father Vittorio Dossi, the Giglio parish priest said Schettino left the boat with his mobile phone, laptop and other personal belongings - and that two of his senior officers were with him in the same lifeboat.

Schettino told the judge he had been unable to obey an order from Captain Gregorio De Falco of the Coast Guard to "get the f*** back on board" because the sailors in charge of the lifeboat would not take him.

Captain Roberto Bosio, 44, on holiday and on his way home after six months sailing the Serena, took command and spent the night helping passengers into lifeboats. "Only a good-for-nothing could have abandoned all those people on board," he said.

Giampietroni, the purser, made his way down to the third deck to check for passengers just after 2am but broke his leg falling into the restaurant as the ship tilted. He climbed on a table when water rushed in.

Asked what he thought about as he lay trapped, he replied: "The dark. The thing that terrified me was being alone in the dark." He shouted for help until he was rescued 36 hours later.

What should he have done once the severity of the incident was known? Captain Kirk Greiner, a maritime consultant and former US Coast Guard inspector, said it was sensible to beach the ship and understandable to delay evacuation until it was known whether or not it would sink.

But all passengers should have been advised to muster on deck before the evacuation was sounded.

"Passengers should never have been asked to go back to their cabins once they were in their lifejackets, but should have been on deck," he said. "Some of the bodies have been recovered from cabins or corridors and they should never have been there."


The Sunday Times

Ship Description

Costa Concordia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

MS Costa Concordia (Italian pronunciation: [ˈkɔsta koŋˈkɔrdia]) is a Concordia class cruise ship owned and operated by Costa Cruises, a subsidiary of American-British Carnival Corporation & Plc. She was built at Fincantieri's Sestri Ponente yards in Italy. The name Concordia was intended to express the wish for "continuing harmony, unity, and peace between European nations".

Costa Concordia was the first of the Concordia class cruise ships, followed by sister ships Costa Serena, Costa Pacifica, Costa Favolosa and Costa Fascinosa, and Carnival Splendor built for Carnival Cruise Lines. When the 114,137 GT Costa Concordia and her sisters entered service, they were among the largest ships built in Italy until the construction of the 130,000 GT Dream class cruise ships.



Costa Concordia
Career
Name: Costa Concordia
Owner: Carnival Corporation & plc
Operator: Costa Cruises
Port of registry: Genoa, Italy
Route: Western Mediterranean
Ordered: 19 January 2004
Builder: Fincantieri Sestri Ponente, Italy
Cost: €450 million (£372 million, US$570 million)[1]
Yard number: 6122
Launched: 2 September 2005
Christened: 7 July 2006[2]
Acquired: 30 June 2006
Maiden voyage: 14 July 2006
In service: July 2006
Out of service: 13 January 2012
Identification:
Call sign: IBHD
IMO number: 9320544
MMSI no.: 247158500
Status: Capsized off Isola del Giglio, Italy



General characteristics 

Class and type: Concordia class cruise ship
Tonnage: 114,137 GT
Length: LOA 290.20 m (952 ft 1 in)
LBP 247.4 m (811 ft 8 in)
Beam: 35.50 m (116 ft 6 in)
Draught: 8.20 m (26 ft 11 in)
Depth: 14.18 m (46 ft 6 in)
Decks: 17
Installed power: 6 × Wärtsilä diesel engines, 75,600 kilowatts (101,400 hp)
Propulsion: Diesel-electric; two shafts (2 × 21 MW)
Two fixed pitch propellers
Speed: service: 21.5 knots (39.8 km/h; 24.7 mph)
maximum: 23 knots (43 km/h; 26 mph)
Capacity: 3780 passengers
Crew: 1,100



Engineering Plant, just forward of the Stack





Recovery Operations

This picture released on Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2012 by the Italian Space Agency (A.S..I.) and taken on Saturday, Jan. 14, 2012, about nine hours after the luxury cruise ship Costa Concordia ran aground the Tuscan tiny island of Isola del Giglio, Italy, shows the hulk of the ship surrounded by rescuers and investigators boats. AP / Italian Space Agency



An excellent video narrative of the final track of Costa Concordia by Captain John Konrad is found at:

http://gcaptain.com/gcaptains-john-konrad-narrates-the-final-maneuvers-of-the-costa-concordia-video/?37941

He also provides a critique of the incident, "The 3 Most Fatal Mistakes" at:

http://gcaptain.com/costa-concordia-3-fatal-flaws-that-led-to-disaster/?37976

This aerial black-and-white video image shot with an infrared camera and made available by the Italian Coastguard Tuesday Jan. 17, 2012 appears to show passengers of shipwrecked cruise liner Costa Concordia slipping down the belly of the luxury liner one-by-one using a rope to reach a lifeboat, bottom left, late Friday Jan. 13, 2012 off Giglio Island, Italy. AP / Italian Coastguard




Saturday, January 21, 2012

Costa Concordia Grounding


It's been difficult gaining an understanding of the occurrance of Costa Concordia's grounding.  One would think that by now, a week after her gounding, we'd have a good timeline developed by the Italian Maritime authorities.  But we're still stuck with media sensationlism and gossip.

I've tried to develop a timeline based on multiple sources and have started a Blog to see if we can develop a plausible scenerio.

Quotes shown are from various witnesses or assessments made by others.

Comments are welcome, hoping we can come close to the actual events that night.

                  

Here sits the ship as we might have expected to see her last Friday just before starting out on her cruise.

Friday, January 13

- 7:00 pm: The ship sets sail from the port of Civitavecchia near Rome, with 4229 people aboard including over 3000 tourists and a crew of more than 1,000, hailing from 60 countries, most of them Italians, French, Germans and Spaniards. The first port-of-call on the seven-day cruise was to be Savona in northwest Italy, with stops including Marseille and Barcelona.

- 8:30 pm: Many passengers are having dinner or drinks in one of Costa Concordia's five restaurants and 13 bars, while others are in their cabins.

- 8:35 pm: The Costa Concordia is approaching the island of Giglio.

- 9:15 p.m.: Ship takes a five miles detour to pass closer to the picturesque Tuscan  (Isla del Giglio)


This first photo depicts a close pass by of the island previously taken by the ship, Blue Line.  Now, on this day the Captain took the ship on a course much closer to the shore line, Red Line.
                                                                            

We next see a Goggle Earth picture taken from  an orbiting space craft and can easily see the submerged rock outcropping which the ship brushed alongside.  There can be no doubt that 
this obstruction was evident on navigational charts.

 


“I was navigating by sight because I knew the depths well and I had done this manoeuvre three or four times,” he reportedly said.“But this time I ordered the turn too late and I ended up in water that was too shallow. I don’t know why it happened.”

Realizing the proximity of a shallow rock outcropping, he ordered right rudder, but too late, slide slipping to port, brushing the rock aft of the port stabilizer.

- 9:30pm: The ship strikes a rocky outcrop just off the Tuscan island of Giglio.  Five minutes later, the electricity goes off. many passengers begin to panic.

The captain was reported to have said he hit a rock that was not marked on his charts.




“Suddenly, around 9.30 pm, there was an almighty bang. Our table went flying, everything crashed to the floor and the lights went out…..”

Ships with high freeboard will heel over considerably in a turn while at speed.  It would appear that realizing his position close to rocks, the Captain ordered a large starboard rudder angle change.  This would almost immediately cause the ship to heave over to port violently which would explain "Our table went flying," etc.  I suspect they were sailing at 15 kts or better.

As an example, when I was conning the aircraft carrier Intrepid, about 15 or so seconds before ordering a course change, we would announce over the 1MC (Public Address System), 'Heel to Port/Starboard,' depending on direction of course change.  The ship heels in the direction opposite to the turn.  On executing the turn, I would order only 5° rudder, then, once seeing the bow begin to swing, I would order the rudder eased to 1°.  Even with this small degree of rudder, the ship would still heel at a good angle and execute the turn timely.  The announcement over the 1MC was given in sufficient time for plane captains to either set aircraft brakes or chock their wheels.  Failing to do so, would result in loosing aircraft over the side.

- 9:35 pm: Power loss means lights go out.  The electricity goes off. Many passengers begin to panic.

- 9.45 pm Alarm is raised but by passengers, not Captain, and via a circuitous route. One passenger calls his parents in Tuscany, who call the local Carabinieri, who then call the coastguard in Livorno on the Tuscan coast.

A first alarm is sounded: two long whistles and one short, informing the crew of a problem.

The ship starts taking on water.  It is now listing 7° to Port.  The Captain continues for a few hundred yards but then turns back towards port as he realizes his ship is in trouble.

- 9:50 pm: The ship begins to list, as the Captain tries to turn the vessel around towards Giglio harbour. In the restaurants, dinnerware crashes off tables. Some passengers rush to their cabins for their life vests.

- 9:58 pm:  – Costa Concordia loses power and the coastguard, alerted by the family of a passenger, begins their rescue operation.

- 10:oo pm: Some passengers gather on the fourth deck where the lifeboats are located, as the Captain tries to manoeuvre the vessel closer to shore.  Ship runs aground???

- 10.05 pm: Capt Schettino radios Costa Crociere, the ship’s owners, and raises alarm.

- 10:10 pm: The "abandon ship" signal is given: seven short whistles and one long. Lifeboats begin their deployment.

- 10.06 pm: Coastguard calls Capt Schettino and asks him what is going on. He tells them “It’s all OK, it’s just a blackout, we’re taking care of the situation.”  Concordia dropped anchor and is halfway into hard turn to starboard ???

- 10.16 pm: Coastguard calls him again and he admits water is coming into the hull but says there is no emergency.


Ship is holed just below the water line adjacent to the Engineering spaces.

- 10:20 pm: The coastguard launches rescue operations with the help of speedboats and helicopters. Giglio's 800-strong population turns out in force to help transfer passengers to shore. Many passengers jump into the chilly waters instead of boarding lifeboats.

- 10:30 pm: Crew announces to passengers at Muster Stations to return to cabins.   Schettino orders a Mayday, Concordia is listing 20 degrees

- 10.30 pm: Under pressure from the coastguard, the captain agrees to send a Mayday signal – 50 minutes after the collision. The ship is by now listing at 20 degrees.

- 10:30-10:50 pm: Concordia is still moving to starboard, apparently under thruster control

- 10:42 pm:  – Costa Concordia stops, evacuation starts and people begin to get into lifeboats.

This appears to be at her original grounding, emergency powered lightening is still available and it appears that all but three of the starboard side lifeboats have been launched.

- 10.50 pm: Again under pressure from the coastguard, the captain orders the ship to be abandoned – 70 minutes after the vessel smashed into the rock.

"From what I can tell, up until 11:00, the ship was still moving (one hour and twenty minutes after the she was holed)."

- 11:00 pm: Concordia finally stops moving toward land, apparently is grounded


Here she appears to be just after her grounding, emergency powered lightening still available and all but perhaps 5 of her 13 starboard side lifeboats previously launched.

"He picked up a chunk of that rock as you can see in the second photo.  He then went out to sea and then turned back to port in an attempt to ground the ship in shallow water to make evacuation easier.  Probably got very aggressive with the counter flooding so to turn over on the opposite side of the damage."


[Believe they had emergency powered lighting up to the time they finally heeled over]

- 11:15 pm:  – Costa Concordia begins to heel over.  The first lifeboat reaches Giglio.   In all, around 4,000 people make it safely aboard a lifeboat.



- 11.40 pm: Capt Schettino reportedly gets into a lifeboat. Passengers, including women and young children, are still on board.

- 11:40 pm: Media reports say Captain Francesco Schettino is found ashore, exhausted.

Saturday, January 14

- 00.40 am: Captain tells coastguard: “I’m co-ordinating the rescue.” In fact, he is in the lifeboat. A coastguard official tells him: 'You’re in a lifeboat? Get back on your ship immediately.’

- 00.50 am: In the Captain’s absence, the coastguard takes control of the operation.

- 02:30 am: Some 300 people remain aboard awaiting evacuation.

By early morning, nine hours after the incident, the Costa Concordia, was at an angle of more than 80 degrees.

Question left unaswered is when the listing became such to make occupying the bridge untenable.


Discussion of Captain's role in the aftermath of grazing the submerged rock.

The ship by all reports lost lightening, perhaps propulsion power, however, noting the presence of emergency lightening and the fact that ship propulsion must have been restored such that the Captain was able to navigate the ship back toward the harbor and ground her on her starboard side, he must be credited for his seamanship up to this point.  Evacuation of passengers is evident by the absence of most of the starboard side lifeboats.

When, and why the ship capsized completely to about 80° is an unknown at this time.  However, when this occurred all emergency lightening was lost, and the hulk was in total darkness, illuminated only by rescue craft arriving on the scene.

"Overseeing an evacuation is part of a captain’s duties. The responsibilities of the captain and crew in the event of an emergency are laid out and approved by the country under whose flag the boat flies."

"Regardless of the boat’s approved safety plan, the captain is at the helm, says Mr. Palmiotti. 'You’re communicating with the outside world from [the command and control center] and internally through telephones and radios,' Palmiotti says. “If there’s no command, there’s no control.  [The captain] has a position on board that’s responsible for coordinating everything, but … I can’t think of a [legally binding] law that enforces that.”

**Sometime After 11:00 Deputy Mayor boards Concordia during this time, no other officers anywhere with the exception of Chief Purser, not even on the bridge.


So. here we have a front on view of what was the bridge, the glassed in structure which extends outboard of all other  decks.  There is no power, no mode of propulsion left, no outside communications available due to loss of power.  Just, what could be conducted in this facility in which
there is no way one can stand upright without support?

All the Captain had to communicate with his ship officers and others in authority, was his hand held VHF Handy Talkie radio.

Where would be the best position in which he could direct further evacuation efforts.  I would offer that
that place might very well be afloat in a boat from which he can circumvent his stranded ship directing the process.  This is where he was later found and accused of abandoning ship.

I offer that this judgement requires careful review.