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email: spill.media@mnz.govt.nz
Media updates
LATEST UPDATE:
Updated 12pm 18 May
Salvage
- Rough weather at the reef earlier in the week caused some disruption to salvage activity but salvors resumed work yesterday and made good progress, removing a large number of bundles of aluminium ingots from the number 1 hold.
- Salvors have also continued to remove containers and pieces of hatch covers and other debris from the bow section of the wreck.
- The wreck remains in a fragile state, subject to the weather conditions. Monitoring has confirmed some further deterioration in the bow section caused by flexing of the wreck. The bow section remains fixed hard on the reef.
- There are currently moderate winds out at the Astrolabe Reef with a sea state of between .5 and 1m. Both the sea state and the winds are expected to drop over the weekend and remain relatively calm through into next week.
Container and debris recovery
- The Braemar Howells recovery team is continuing its efforts to recover plastic beads from parts of the Coromandel and Matakana Island in particular.
- Shoreline teams are working in areas including Matapaua Bay, and clean-up methods using modified vacuum equipment is working well. Helicopters are being used to recover debris from isolated areas and transfer it to motorised barges standing by offshore.
- On Matakana Island, shoreline recovery teams are cleaning up beads and some timber from the sand dunes above the high tide mark.
- Shoreline surveys and clean-up have also continued on Papamoa and Pukehina beaches.
- The Braemar distressed cargo specialists say that over the past week an additional 100 tonnes of aluminium ingots have been landed ashore. This takes the total amount of aluminium recovered to 309 tonnes.
- Braemar NZ Operations Manager Neil Lloyd says that a comprehensive sonar sweep of the seabed aimed at locating containers and large debris items has been completed. The team is now moving into phase two of the operation, where targets are identified to confirm whether they’ve come from Rena. Details will be made available at the completion of this project.
- The number of containers recovered by the salvors and landed ashore by Braemar stands at 778.
- Meanwhile, Braemar plans to investigate this weekend reports of a large object offshore from Waihi Beach. The recovery team is continuing to respond to sporadic reports of debris coming ashore, the latest from Hahei on the Coromandel.
Oil Spill Response
- Members of the public are encouraged to keep reporting any sightings of oil to the oil spill response hotline on 0800 OIL SPILL (0800 645 774).
- The oil spill response has been reduced from a Tier 3, or national level, to Tier 2, or regional level, response. Any queries about the oil spill response should now be directed to the Bay of Plenty Regional Council.
MEDIA REMINDER:
It is critical to safe operations that the aerial and marine exclusion zone of three nautical miles around the Astrolabe Reef and 1500 feet above the exclusion zone is observed and respected.
Entering the exclusion zone can seriously impact on the recovery operation and put those working on salvaging the ship at risk. It is also an offence to enter the exclusion zone and anyone found breaching this zone could be fined up to $20,000.
MEDIA CONFERENCES:
Please note that as of 10 February, due to low demand, the weekly press conferences were cancelled. From this date on, MNZ will convene press conference as and when the situation requires it. Media will be informed by email when press conferences are scheduled to be held.
As of Monday 30 January, the ICC has moved to a new address. Press conferences will now be held at 52 Glenlyon Ave, Greerton, Tauranga.
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ALL media enquiries:
0800 774 554 (0800 SPILL INFO) (within NZ only)
spill.media@mnz.govt.nz
Attention media: the correct procedure for media wanting access to the forward operations base for the on-water oil spill and salvage operations is as follows:
- Please DO NOT go to the waterfront expecting to be given access. Please contact the Response Media Team on 0800 774 554 to arrange access, and we will coordinate this. Any media not doing this will be turned away.
- The forward operations area contains significant and numerous hazards. Media cleared to visit the base must BRING the following:
- a high visibility vest
- hard hat
- lifejacket
- suitable footwear
- Anyone not bringing or wearing suitable protective clothing will be denied access. The response team does not have spare gear available for media.
Information release
In response to requests from the media and other interested parties for information about the government’s response to the Rena grounding, the Ministry of Transport has released a document containing correspondence to and from the office of the Minister of Transport between 5 October 2011 and 12 October 2011.
Rena correspondence [PDF: 4.5Mb, 76 pages]
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