UPDATE! Cougar Ace Is Saved!

that looks promising, i wonder how well the cars were strapped down!!

rob
 
Finally upright, Cougar Ace will be Portland-bound
WIDE BAY: Thousands of Mazdas stayed put and may be salable.


By LISA DEMER
Anchorage Daily News

Published: August 26, 2006
Last Modified: August 26, 2006 at 01:34 AM


Amazingly, the Mazdas may be OK.


Crews have righted the huge car carrier Cougar Ace, the ship that went sideways 230 miles south of the Aleutians, and are preparing to tow it to Portland, Ore., according to the U.S. Coast Guard.

It could be ready to leave Sunday or a couple of days after that, said Cmdr. Joe LoSciuto, who is deputy over the Western Alaska Coast Guard sector.

The ship keeled over onto its port side July 23 as the crew was attempting to adjust the ballast water at sea. International rules require a change of ballast before a foreign ship comes into port so that the ballast doesn't contaminate local waters with unfamiliar species that could become a nuisance, LoSciuto said.

The Cougar Ace has been moored at Icicle Seafoods' buoys in Wide Bay, northwest of Dutch Harbor, since tugs pulled it in Aug. 8. Workers finally stood it up straight Thursday night.

The Singapore-flagged ship was loaded with the whole inventory of Japanese-built Mazdas sold in the United States -- subcompacts and SUVS, Miatas and RX-8 sports cars, nearly 5,000 vehicles in all, said Jeremy Barnes, a Mazda spokesman.

The vehicles didn't tumble or crash when the ship listed, LoSciuto said. Each was secured to the ship with a "single point device." Mazda assured the Coast Guard that the system had been tested to hold down vehicles twice as heavy, he said.

Mazda wasn't ready to say its fleet is good to go. It needs to examine the cars, Barnes said.

"We don't have a car count as to what is salable and what condition they are in. It all depends on what we find when we get in," Barnes said.

But as far as the Coast Guard could determine, "there was minimal damage to the cars," LoSciuto said. Some seawater seeped in around the wheels of some vehicles, but generally the ship was watertight, he said.

A small sheen of lubricating oil leaked from the ship's bow thruster area Aug. 2 when it was still at sea, but officials haven't been able to determine why.

At the mooring on Unalaska Island, crews pumped out water from a cargo deck, where the sea had slowly leaked in from the cargo door ramp, and then used computer models to help determine how to balance the ship by adjusting water in ballast tanks, according to the Coast Guard.

Workers from Dutch Harbor-based Magone Marine Service Inc. also pumped out oily water from the bilge and shaft alleys. The oily water went into tanks for disposal. It may be carted to Seattle, said John Brown, a specialist with the state Department of Environmental Conservation who spent 10 days on Unalaska Island monitoring the operation.

The salvage is being managed by Titan Maritime.

A naval architect was killed when he slipped and hit his head while on the then-sideways ship. But all the ship's crew was rescued safely by the Alaska Air National Guard and the Coast Guard.

The Singapore government is investigating what made the ship list during the ballast change, which happened in international waters, LoSciuto said.

Singapore must certify the ship is safe for tow before it leaves port, he said.

Under the plan, two tugboats will bring it to Portland, where there are facilities for the vehicles and for ship repair, he said. The trip will take about 10 days.

While the Cougar Ace, owned by Mitsui OSK Lines of Tokyo, does not appear damaged, its systems need to be inspected by experts, according to the Coast Guard. For instance, the bunker fuel thickened in the cold when the ship listed.
 
Just so no-one has to worry about the Cougar Ace vehicles being sold as new:

(Sep 11) HIROSHIMA, Japan-- Mazda North American Operations (MNAO) today announced that the Mazda vehicles aboard the car-carrying vessel, Cougar Ace, which ran into trouble on July 23, 2006, off the Alaskan coast, resulting in her listing some 60-plus degrees, will not be sold as new vehicles.

"While we do not, at this time, know the full extent of the damage to vehicles on board, none of the Mazdas will be sold as new", said Jim O'Sullivan, president and CEO of MNAO. "Those beyond repair will be immediately scrapped. It is possible that those vehicles which are repairable would be made available for sale as used cars through Mazda's dealer network in the U.S. and Canada. We will only be in a position to decide on any used car sales once the vessel has been unloaded and each unit comprehensively inspected."

"In the interests of transparency and customer peace of mind, we will post a listing of all vehicle identification numbers (VINs) on our consumer Websites, www.MazdaUSA.com and www.mazda.ca so that there is no confusion as to which vehicles were on the ship," stated O'Sullivan.

Slightly more than half of the cars are MAZDA3s and about one-fourth are Mazda CX-7s. The vehicles were headed to the ports of Vancouver (Canada), Tacoma and Hueneme (U.S.).

The Cougar Ace sailed from Japan to North America with just over 4,700 Canadian- and U.S-bound Mazdas aboard. She became stricken when an issue during a routine ballast-water change caused her to list. Thanks to heroic efforts of the U.S. Coast Guard, all 23 crew members were transferred from the ship within hours.

After the ship was stabilized, she was towed by her owners to sheltered waters in Dutch Harbor, Alaska, where she was returned to an even keel. She is currently under tow to the Port of Portland, Ore., where she is expected to arrive on September 12 (the same date in local time). Upon arrival, her cargo will be further evaluated and unloaded.
 
cool man... a whole bunch of no damage salvage vehicles... maybe my turbo RX8 pipe dream can now become a reality... hehehe
 
I bet Mazda had already written them off, and decided to use this as a good PR spin. Good move on their part, especially publicly posting the VINs for consumer piece of mind.
 
Last edited:
All M/V Cougar Ace Mazdas to be scrapped per a potentially reliable source of mine. Look it up and see if you find any more info on this.

367 (mp3yellow
 
(peep) they showed the cougar ace on the premier of the new season of Deadliest Catch on Discovery last night

:D
 
evilmonkeyMSP said:
(peep) they showed the cougar ace on the premier of the new season of Deadliest Catch on Discovery last night

:D

Hehe... yep... didn't look very salvageable to me....(yes)
 
The f/v Ocean Challenger sank. The car carrier Overseas Joyce was the responding vessel. It wasnt the Cougar Ace. Unless I missed something.
 
Last edited:
Back