Sanchi oil tanker collision

Sanchi oil tanker collision
Sanchi oil tanker collision is located in Ryukyu Islands
Collision
Collision
Shanghai
Shanghai
Sinking
Sinking
Okinawa
Okinawa
Approximate locations of the collision and sinking in the East China Sea
DateJanuary 6, 2018; 6 years ago (2018-01-06)
Time20:00 CST (UTC+08:00)
LocationEast China Sea, 160 nmi (300 km) east of Shanghai
Coordinates28°22′00″N 125°55′00″E / 28.3667°N 125.9167°E / 28.3667; 125.9167
CauseCollision
Participants53 crew
(32 on Sanchi and 21 on CF Crystal)
Deaths32 (all on Sanchi)

The Sanchi oil tanker collision occurred on 6 January 2018 when the Panamanian-flagged, Iranian-owned tanker Sanchi, with a full natural-gas condensate cargo of 136,000 tonnes (960,000 barrels), sailing from Iran to South Korea, collided with the Hong Kong-flagged cargo ship CF Crystal 160 nautical miles (300 km) off Shanghai, China. Sanchi caught fire shortly after the collision; after burning and drifting for over a week, it sank on 14 January.[1]

All of Sanchi's 32 crew members were killed.[1]

The crew of CF Crystal was rescued and the ship made port in China. The financial damage of the sinking of Sanchi, based on NIOC estimates, is around USD 110 million: USD 60 million for the cargo and US$50 million for the vessel itself.

  1. ^ a b Madrigal, Alexis (19 January 2018). "The World has never seen an Oil Spill like this". The Atlantic. Archived from the original on 19 January 2018.