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ONE APUS Container Ship Accident Update:The Number of Damaged Containers Maybe Up to 2,250

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  The  container ship  ONE APUS  is still safely moored in The Port of Kobe after being hit by bad weather on 30 November 2020. An estimated 1,816 containers were damaged and lost before. On the evening of December 23, the official website of Ocean Network ONE released the latest update news: up to December 22, 50 containers have been discharged safely;Unloading of the remaining containers has been proceeding steadily.It is expected to take some time to complete the unloading. Meanwhile, inspections and inspections of containers are being carried out to assess the status of the cargo. The move follows a ONE11 announcement late On Tuesday that it is expected to take at least a month or more to carefully dismantle the cleanup and unload the ship's containers, according to a timetable laid out by stowage planners. But according to WK Webster, an insurance claims company, it is estimated that as many as  2,250 containers  may have been lost or damaged beca...

ONE APUS will redirect to Japan after the accident

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  On Monday night, November 30, 2020,   ONE APUS , a large container ship owned by ONE, was involved in a maritime accident in the Pacific Ocean northwest of Hawaii, causing   more than 1,900 containers   to damage or fall overboard. The ship was sailing from the Chinese port of Yantian to Long Beach, about 1,600 nautical miles northwest of Hawaii, on November 19 when it encountered a powerful storm that generated strong winds and huge surges, causing the containers to collapse and fall overboard. It is estimated that the number of lost or damaged containers may exceed 1,900, of which about 40 are dangerous goods containers. The ship was sailing from the Chinese port of Yantian to Long Beach, about 1,600 nautical miles northwest of Hawaii, on November 19 when it encountered a powerful storm that generated strong winds and huge surges, causing the containers to collapse and fall overboard. It is estimated that the number of lost or damaged containers may exceed 1,900,...