Japan: Crippled whaling ship's engine restarted
   
  MSNBC 2-22-07
  
New Zealand not so sure, wants the vessel towed from Antarctic waters
Updated: 1 hour, 44 minutes ago
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17281101/
WELLINGTON, New Zealand - Japanese whalers said Thursday they restarted 
the engine of a whaling ship damaged by fire near Antarctica, but New 
Zealand officials said the vessel remained a danger and demanded it be 
moved to avoid an environmental disaster.

Japan appears determined that the stricken Nisshin Maru will leave the 
region under its own steam, while New Zealand and conservationists say 
it should accept offers of help to tow it away to ease fears it could 
spill oil or other toxic chemicals near Antarctica's largest penguin 
rookery.

Glenn Inwood, a spokesman for the government-linked Japanese Institute 
of Cetacean Research, said the crew managed to get the engine started 
on Thursday, a week after a fire burned out the ship's main switchboards 
and engulfed its whale processing deck. One man died.
"The last report we had ... was that the engine was going. They'd 
replaced all the wiring, and checked all the gauges and the mechanics of it 
and kicked the old girl into gear," he told New Zealand's National 
Radio.

New Zealand Conservation Minister Chris Carter said Japanese officials 
had made repeated claims of progress in the repairs, when it was clear 
the ship was dead in the water.

"The New Zealand government wants that ship out of there," Carter told 
Sky television.

He said the Japanese appeared to be too embarrassed about the ship to 
ask for help.


Steve Corbett of Maritime New Zealand, the search and rescue authority 
for the region that has been in daily contact with Nisshin Maru, said 
officials on board said they had conducted initial tests on the engine, 
but had given no sign that power was about to be restored.

"They have turned the engine over a couple of times — but it was 
never fully started and it's certainly not running at the moment," he said 
Thursday.

There was still "a fair bit of work to do to restore ... propulsion, 
steering, navigation and support systems. They've given no timeframe as 
to when that might be done by," he said.

Japanese officials say the fire did not cause any structural damage to 
the 8,000-ton ship, which is carrying some 343,000 gallons of oil and 
other chemicals. It is lashed to two other ships from the whaling fleet 
that will tow the vessel away from Antarctica if there is any 
environmental danger, officials say.

The weather in the Ross Sea where the ship is drifting continues to be 
calm, Corbett said.

Since being crippled seven days ago, the ship has drifted north 27 
miles, putting it 137 miles north of the pristine Antarctic coast and the 
world's largest Adelie penguin breeding rookery, Corbett said.

The U.S. State Department said New Zealand had asked a U.S. Coast Guard 
icebreaker to take pictures of the Nisshin Maru to help assess the 
potential threat it poses to the environment.

"They specifically asked a U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker, the Polar Sea, 
which was in the region, ... to take some pictures for their assessment 
purposes," spokesman Tom Casey said.

Greenpeace called again on the Japanese whalers to accept an offer of a 
tow from the conservation group's ship Esperanza, a former tug, which 
is nearby.

"The time to act is now, and Greenpeace has the only vessel in the area 
with the proper gear and necessary sea salvage capabilities," said 
Karen Sack, Whales Project Leader with Greenpeace USA.

Japan says its annual whale hunts are for research, but environmental 
groups say they are a pretext to keep Japan's tiny whaling industry 
alive. The IWC imposed a global ban on commercial whaling in 1986.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material 
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


 
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