Disaster Brazil Wants to Abandon a 34,000-Ton Ship at Sea. It Would be an Environmental Disaster

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Brazil Wants to Abandon a 34,000-Ton Ship at Sea. It Would be an Environmental Disaster​

BY CIARA NUGENT

Somewhere in the South Atlantic ocean right now, a 34,000-ton, 870-ft. aircraft carrier is floating aimlessly on the waves. The vessel, caught in an international dispute over its toxic contents, is about to become one of the biggest pieces of trash in the ocean.

The São Paulo, as the ship is known, has been stuck in limbo for five months. Brazil’s navy sold the 60-year-old vessel—the largest in its fleet—for scrap to a Turkish shipyard in 2021, and in August 2022, it set off for Turkey from a naval base in Rio de Janeiro. But while it was on the move, Turkey rescinded its permission to enter, saying Brazil hadn’t been able to prove that the São Paulo was free of asbestos—a toxic mineral used in the construction of many 20th century ships. So, the boat turned around.

Brazil doesn’t want it back, though. In September, a port on the coast of Pernambuco state blocked the ship from docking. The port argued there was too big a risk that the ship would be abandoned, leaving port authorities to pick up the tab for moving it and dealing with the asbestos. That left the São Paulo circling off the Brazilian coast, until Jan. 20, when Brazil’s navy announced that it had pushed the ship out to international waters, where it remains. The navy says it had to do so because the aging ship, which incurred damage to its hull during its odyssey, could have run aground or sank on the Brazilian coast, threatening other boats and coastal wildlife.

It appears the navy’s solution is to abandon the São Paulo at sea. Military sources told Brazil’s Folha de São Paulo newspaper on Saturday that sinking the vessel—using explosives—is the only way to put an end to the controversy surrounding it.

The ship’s saga is set to become an extreme case of vessel abandonment—a problem that plagues marine conservationists and coastal communities around the world. Ocean watchdogs say sinking a boat as big and old as the São Paulo would be an environmental disaster; according to the Basel Action Network (BAN), an NGO, the ship contains thousands of metric tons of asbestos and other toxic substances in its electrical wiring, paints, and fuel stores.

Abandoning it at sea would constitute “gross negligence” and violate three separate international environmental conventions, says Jim Puckett, BAN’s executive director. “We’re talking about a ship containing both hazardous materials and valuable materials—it’s supposed to be brought into the territory of Brazil and managed in an environmentally sound way,” Puckett says. “You can’t just sink it.”

Approached for comment, the Brazilian navy directed TIME to its official announcements, which say only that the navy will not allow the São Paulo to return to Brazil. They do not address where it will go instead.

It’s not uncommon for boats to be abandoned. Because they are expensive to maintain and to dispose of properly, tens of thousands of unwanted vessels—normally much smaller than an aircraft carrier—are left in harbors, on beaches, or at sea every year. In Nigeria, thousands of wrecked cargo ships and commercial fishing vessels litter the coast, destroying beach ecosystems, worsening coastal erosion, and making waterways dangerous to pass for local communities. In Venice, around2,000 abandoned small recreational boats are clogging up a local wetland. In the U.S., the Government Accountability Office estimates that from 2013 to 2016, there were 5,600 boats abandoned in U.S. waters—likely a very lowball estimate, according to Nancy Wallace, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s marine debris program.

The problem is, what’s left onboard those boats doesn’t stay onboard. “Anytime there’s a vessel that’s left at sea, the first thing to think about is toxic chemicals, which can be very impactful to wildlife,” Wallace says. Abandoned boats of any size can cause oil spills and leach paint chemicals and microplastics into the water, while debris such as nets can come loose, trapping fish.

Older vessels also often contain so-called PCBs, a group of highly carcinogenic chemicals that were often used in electrical wiring before the 1970s and were globally banned under the 2001 Stockholm convention. When dumped in the ocean, scientists say PCBs work their way up the marine food chain, affecting everything from small crustaceans to orcas. BAN estimates that the São Paulo, which was built in France in the 1960s, contains around 300 metric tons of PCBs, based on analysis of its sister ship, the Clemencau. The NGO says leaving the vessel at sea would violate both the Stockholm convention and the 1996 London Protocol.

In Brazil, the face of the ship abandonment problem is Guanabara Bay in Rio de Janeiro state, where some 200 vessels, including cargo ships and oil tankers, have been left to rot by owners caught up in financial or legal troubles. Local NGOs say the resulting oil and chemical pollution has dramatically reduced native mangrove, tortoise, and dolphin populations, and has hurt the livelihoods of local fishermen. The bay made national headlines in November, when a storm caused a 660-ft. cargo ship to come loose from its moorings and crash into the Rio-Niteroi—Latin America’s longest over-water bridge.

Removing such vessels is a major headache for governments. Hauling them out can cost anywhere from $8,000 (the per-boat cost for 14 recreational boats recently lifted out of the water in South Carolina) to $1.8 million (the cost for removing an 83-ft. fishing boat in Saipan in 2021, which had been degrading a nearby coral reef in the Northern Mariana Islands for six years after a 2015 storm left it too damaged for its owners to repair.)

But, thankfully, it is highly unusual for a ship as large as the São Paulo to be deliberately abandoned. That’s because large boats like cruise ships, container ships, and aircraft carriers contain vast amounts of high-quality valuable metals, especially steel, which can be salvaged and resold. (Recycling is also beneficial for the environment, since manufacturing new steel is extremely carbon-intensive.)

Puckett, from BAN, says the idea of sinking the São Paulo doesn’t make financial sense for Brazil. “It’s got millions of dollars worth of steel to be recycled, which far outweighs the cost of managing those hazardous materials,” he says. “I’ve never seen such a valuable ship being deliberately sunk.”

BAN is calling on Brazil’s new leftist President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva to step in. To comply with international treaties, including the Basel Convention restricting the export of toxic waste, Puckett says the navy must tow the São Paulo into a naval base, repair the damage to the hull, and then offer the recycling contract to new shipyards in Europe, which can safely remove the asbestos before dismantling the ship.

Lula’s government has privately expressed concerns about the environmental impact of abandoning the ship, according to Folha de São Paulo, the Brazilian newspaper. But it is unwilling to start a conflict with the navy because Lula’s relationship with the armed forces is under severe strain following recent civilian calls for a military coup. So, with little sign of an about-face from the navy, it looks like the São Paulo is heading for a toxic watery grave.
 
This was Lula's big folly, he bought a shit carrier from France while the US wanted to gift us the recently retired USS JFK.

That shit barely worked despite hundreds of millions spent in upgrades and repairs to the boiler units, it served from 2004-2006 at sea and then became basically a troopship, it wasn't retired because that would put into reserve a shit ton of flag officers cause it was the flagship of the navy.

It wasn't until we bought another carrier to keep the admirals checks and their benefits in place that we officially "retired" that piece of shit.
Fun fact is that the armed forces are in for some fun, they were supposed to help the election, but they didn't do shit and certified then, even when Lula had 2000 more ad hours than Bolsonaro because the electoral system deliberately failed to send his ads to the radio and tv stations to run (we got obligatory electoral ads for fairness), and they didn't check if the electronic polls weren't hacked.


Now they got a pissed off right wing that was their only supporters, who now openly mocks them and their cowardice, and the left wing who hated them since forever and want to castrate them to be impossible to be relevant politically or nationally.
 
So what you're saying is...free aircraft carrier to anyone that wants it?
Sounds like a good opportunity null to salvage the ship and have a floating kiwi server farm fortress, crewed by kiwis that can operate in international waters. I can just imagine the left wing hit pieces that would come out of that one

I mean thats better than the alternative - tranch members seizing it instead, loading it up with starving alpacas with an all troon crew and then traveling up and down the coast of north america sending troon strike forces ashore to 'rescue' kids to take them back to the carrier and troon them out in their sickbay, using them to build up their troon navy and antifa/BLM marines. antifa having carrier support might make things interesting. They could rechristen it the keffals and fund the carriers operation via gofundme

Granted the end result, assuming they didn't sink the carrier within a week or two while wacked out of their mind and doing stupid shit on opiates, with all the 'rescued' trans kids that would make the survivors of the fuhrerbunker blush, because of their stinkditch pain
 
The vessel, caught in an international dispute over its toxic contents, is about to become one of the biggest pieces of trash in the ocean.
Holy shit
I haven't kept up with the logistics industry, but honestly, amazing job
I didn't know they managed to build a ship that's bigger than Great Britain
 
They should turn it into an entertainment venue

Fill it full of fast breeding aggressive to humans species and then charge rich people a fortune to play space hulk irl, boarding and retrieving objectives with military guns and grenades to deal with incoming wildlife

Stream it on PPV with live betting on kills, deaths etc and you're printing money
 
Sounds like a good opportunity null to salvage the ship and have a floating kiwi server farm fortress, crewed by kiwis that can operate in international waters. I can just imagine the left wing hit pieces that would come out of that one

Some early web 2.0 investor had a idea like this some years ago with a old cruise ship and it was deemed after many rounds of planning and research to never be able to break even let alone profit from it, Ship's with live cargo i.e. people are really intensive to run when it comes to cost that's why cargo and container ship's keep getting bigger but the crew remains the same size or only adding 1 - 5 crew per generation in comparison to there displacement growing by 10% or more.

You then also run into the problem with communications, inside the waters of a nation a ship to shore communication via radio and microwave might be reliable enough to host some high use infrastructure but once outside that it get's very hard to to with any speed or efficiency.

I mean thats better than the alternative - tranch members seizing it instead, loading it up with starving alpacas with an all troon crew and then traveling up and down the coast of north america sending troon strike forces ashore to 'rescue' kids to take them back to the carrier and troon them out in their sickbay, using them to build up their troon navy and antifa/BLM marines. antifa having carrier support might make things interesting. They could rechristen it the keffals and fund the carriers operation via gofundme

As funny as it would be to watch - it would be on the bottom in under a week.
 
Literally just crash it into the shore of some 3rd world country and let them salvage it for free. Hell do it on Brazil itself I can think of a dozen beaches just in the southeast alone that would probably love the novelty of a big fuck off Aircraft Carrier crashed on it.
 
Can't you just drain any reserve oil or large quantity of hazard material and the rest of it won't do a lot of damage. I remember Top Gear had the crew dropping old cars in the ocean to help coral reefs.

On a car that's easy, but on something the size of even a moderate ship - not a chance, without some serious money getting thrown at it anyway and they are cash strapped enough that it's not an option.

The environmental impacts are negligible but and I have to stress this it's not about that it's the backlash you will get from environmentalists if you tried without it getting OK'd by them (who ignore the Greenpeace fleet that's a floating poloution factory) while they all rely on good and services that are far more polluting than just sinking the thing in a controlled way.

There is also the financial aspects of this, there is someone out there getting ready to profit off a lot of low radiation steel and copper from that hull so why waist that resource for the Admirals slush fund by sinking it.
 
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I remember seeing a thing about a sort of "ship graveyard" in South East Asia where entire villages based their economy around dismantling/recycling shit like this.
Why can't they have it?
They'd make short work of it if it could get sent to Bangladesh. They're simpler folk, no invoking forgotten laws to get one up on another country for reasons.
 
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If it's going to sink the best place for it to happen is the open sea. Environmental catastrophes happen, when ships get wrecked near a coastline.

Environmental groups are publicity whores, this is a weird story so they're hopping on board hoping to get a bit of engagements. In the 1990's Greenpeace made a huge deal about the Brent Spar oil rig being disposed at sea, even though internal documents showed they knew that it was the safest way to do it. They created a public scare and milked it for donations and forced Shell and the Norwegian government to drag it into a Fjord.
 
They'd make short work of it if it could get sent to Bangladesh. They're simpler folk, no invoking forgotten laws to get one up on another country for reasons.
The problem is all the scavenger graveyards are in the Pacific or Indian Ocean. The Sao Paulo is in the Atlantic, and a ship without its own power cannot transition the Panama or Suez Canals. And no way would this derelict abomination survive a trip around either horn.
 
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The problem is all the scavenger graveyards are in the Pacific or Indian Ocean. The Sao Paulo is in the Atlantic, and a ship without its own power cannot transition the Panama or Suez Canals. And no way would this derelict abomination survive a trip around either horn.
It could. The US recently moved one of its decommissioned carriers larger than this one around South America.
 
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