OMI Charger

History
United States of America
Name: OMI Charger
Operator: OMI Corporation
Ordered: December 15, 1969
Builder: Bethlehem Steel Corporation
Launched: December 15, 1969
Fate: Sank in Galveston, Texas on October 9, 1993
General characteristics
Class and type: Steel hull oil tanker
Tonnage: 34,485 tonnes deadweight (DWT)
Length: 631 ft 1 in (192.35 m)
Beam: 90.1 ft (27.5 m)
Draught: 48.9 ft (14.9 m)
Propulsion: steam turbine 15,000 horse power

The OMI Charger was a single-hulled oil tanker built in 1969 and used by the OMI Corporation.

Disaster

On October 9, 1993 while the tanker was anchored at Boliver Roads near Galveston, Texas, work began on sealing a previously discovered leak in a cargo tank. When a crew member lit an arc welder inside a tank, it ignited gasoline vapors, causing a tremendous explosion which killed three crew members and injured seven. The subsequent fire burned for five hours, and the ship was a total loss.

A US Coast Guard investigation determined that the cargo tank had been improperly cleared and insufficiently tested prior to the incident.[1]

References

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