Posted March 30, 2001 - Reuters
Mitsui O.S.K. Lines has not yet decided what it will do with its container ship when it returns to Japan this week, a company official said on Tuesday, after China rejected the vessel for "abnormal" radiation levels.
The MOL Presence is the first ship barred from unloading its cargo at a foreign port over radiation concerns since Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant was crippled by the March 11 earthquake, a spokesman for the Japanese Shipowners Association said.
Governments, including China and the United States, have begun screening for radiation on ships that traveled from Japan's quake-hit northeast, threatening to slow seaborne trade for the world's third largest economy.
"The container ship is expected to arrive in the port of Kobe on Wednesday," said a spokeswoman for MOL, the world's 11th largest container shipper. "The travel plan on when or whether the container ship will depart Kobe is not decided as of now."
If radiation levels are confirmed to be too high on the vessel, MOL may be forced to dispose of the machinery, furniture and other cargo on the ship and reimburse its clients since insurance companies do not cover radiation exposure linked to nuclear accidents, industry experts said.
The vessel would also need to be thoroughly cleaned before it can set sail again.
Chinese authorities detected a maximum of 3.5 microsieverts per hour on MOL's ship when it arrived at the port of Xiamen in eastern Fujian province last week, the company spokeswoman said.
Complete Story at:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/29/us-japan-quake-mitsui-idUSTRE72S0P520110329
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
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