Red Sea fighting traps two oil ships in Houthi waters

The vessels are near the port of Ras Issa from where Iran-aligned Houthis launch missiles on ships passing through the Red Sea, and where US missiles land as they target the Houthis.

Jonathan Saul, Noah Browning, and Mohammed Ghobari

Jonathan Saul, Noah Browning, and Mohammed Ghobari

The Star

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Neither of the ships has moved since August as the Houthis and their foes in Yemen’s government could not agree on who should receive the money for the oil, a Houthi source told Reuters. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

March 22, 2024

LONDON/ADEN – Two tankers, containing oil and toxic waste, are stuck in the Red Sea in the firing line between Western naval forces and Yemen’s Houthi militants despite repeated efforts by the United Nations to empty and move the ships to avoid a spill.

The vessels, one of which has been stranded for years, are near the port of Ras Issa from where Iran-aligned Houthis launch missiles on ships passing through the Red Sea and where U.S. missiles land as they target the Houthis.

The United Nations last year led efforts to remove a million barrels of oil from the decaying tanker, the FSO Safer, to a new tanker, the MT Yemen, in an operation that cost $121 million.

The UN had hoped to move the FSO Safer, which still contains toxic waste water and oily residue, for disposal elsewhere and sell the oil aboard the MT Yemen.

Neither of the ships has moved since August as the Houthis and their foes in Yemen’s internationally-recognised government could not agree who should receive the money for the oil, a Houthi source speaking on condition of anonymity told Reuters.

The source also said there was no an agreement to tow the ship away.

The UN Development Programme said it was in discussion “with all relevant parties in Yemen” about the handover of the vessel.

“(UNDP) has not had any indication from the de facto authorities in Yemen of threats to deliberately damage the vessel,” a UNDP spokesperson said, referring to the Houthis.

A source with the internationally recognised Yemeni government, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said he believed the Houthis have refused to release either of the ships and were using them to increase their bargaining power.

TOXIC SLUDGE

A former supertanker built in the 1970s, the FSO Safer was converted into a floating storage and offloading facility for oil before the outbreak of civil war in Yemen in 2014.

It is so decayed its rotting hull threatened to spill its cargo into the Red Sea.

Last year, the United Nations contracted Dutch-based SMIT Salvage, which removed the oil. Belgium’s Euronav provided the MT Yemen vessel.

The toxic sludge and wash water used to scrub oil out of the tanker have still not been removed, a shipping source said.

He asked not to be named due to the sensitivity of the matter and added that some 70,000 metric tons of residue were still onboard the FSO Safer.

A spokesperson for Boskalis, the parent company of SMIT salvage, said it had been contracted to remove the oil but not the Safer vessel.

Belgium’s Euronav has maintained a crew onboard the MT Yemen since August under its contract with the UN.

“Once the handover process is complete, the crew will leave,” the UNDP spokesperson said.

Euronav said it continued to assist the UNDP to safely handover the MT Yemen. It did not specify who might ultimately receive the ship.

(Reporting by Jonathan Saul, Noah Browning and Mohammed Ghobari; Editing by Simon Webb, Dmitry Zhdannikov and Barbara Lewis)

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