Brazil sinks warship in Atlantic despite pollution concerns

Brazil sinks warship in Atlantic despite pollution concerns

Navy scuttles decommissioned plane service in Atlantic Ocean regardless of environmentalists warning vessel was filled with poisonous supplies.

Controlled sinking occurred some 350 kilometres off Brazilian coast in Atlantic Ocean, in an area with an
Controlled sinking occurred some 350 kilometres off Brazilian coast in Atlantic Ocean, in an space with an “approximate depth of 5,000 metres,” says Navy. [File]
(AFP)

Brazil has scuttled a decommissioned plane service regardless of environmental teams claiming the previously French ship was filled with poisonous supplies.

The “planned and controlled sinking occurred late in the afternoon” on Friday, some 350 kilometres off the Brazilian coast within the Atlantic Ocean, in an space with an “approximate depth of 5,000 metres,” Brazilian Navy stated in a press release.

The six-decade-old warship, the Sao Paulo, was scuttled, after Brazil tried in useless to discover a port prepared to welcome it.

Ahead of its sinking, environmentalists stated the plane service incorporates tonnes of asbestos, heavy metals and different poisonous supplies that might leach into the water and pollute the marine meals chain.

“If they proceed with dumping the very toxic vessel into the wilderness of the Atlantic Ocean, they will violate the terms of three international environmental treaties,” director of the Basel Action Network, Jim Puckett, stated on Thursday. 

French environmental group Robin des Bois known as the ship a “30,000-tonne toxic package.”

‘High danger’ to surroundings

Built within the late Fifties in France, whose navy sailed it for 37 years because the Foch, the plane service earned a spot in Twentieth-century naval historical past.

It took half in France’s first nuclear assessments within the Pacific within the Sixties, and deployments in Africa, the Middle East and the previous Yugoslavia from the Seventies to Nineteen Nineties.

Brazil purchased the 266-metre plane service for $12 million in 2000.

A hearth broke out on board in 2005, accelerating the ageing ship’s decline.

Last yr, Brazil authorised a Turkish agency to dismantle the Sao Paulo for scrap steel.

But in August, simply as a tugboat was about to tow it into the Mediterranean Sea, Turkish environmental authorities blocked the plan.

They didn’t permit the vessel into the nation’s territorial waters citing a hazardous substance stock report that was not offered to the Turkish authorities.

Brazil then introduced the plane service again, however didn’t permit it into port, citing the “high risk” to the surroundings.

Source: AFP

Source: www.trtworld.com

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