Salem (supertanker)

Salem
History
Name:
  • Name? (1969–1977)
  • South Sun (1977–1979)
  • Salem (1979–)
Owner:
  • Salénrederierna AB (1969–1977)
  • Pimmerton Shipping Ltd. (1977–1979)
  • Oxford Shipping Incorporated, Houston
Port of registry: Monrovia
Builder: Kockums Mekaniska Verkstad, Malmö
Christened: 1969
Status: Sank 17 January 1980
General characteristics
Class and type: VLCC
Tonnage: 96,228 GRT
Length: 316.08 m (1,037.0 ft) (LOA)
Beam: 48.77 m (160.0 ft)
Height: 24.50 m (80.4 ft)
Installed power: 32,000 hp (24,000 kW)
Propulsion: 1 × Stal-Laval steam turbine
Speed: 16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph) max
Crew: 25

Salem was a crude oil tanker which on 17 January 1980 was sunk in part of a $100-million fraud off the Senegalese coast.

History

Ship

The tanker, T/T Sea Sovereign, was commissioned in 1969 in Stockholm for Salénrederierna AB and built at the Kockums shipyard in Malmö. In 1977 Salénrederierna sold the tanker to Pimmerton Shipping Ltd. (Liberia), as South Sun and ship management was placed in the hands of Wallem Ship Management Ltd. (Hong Kong). Two years later South Sun was sold to Oxford Shipping Inc. (U.S.). The ship was renamed Salem, but remained under the Liberian flag.

Loading and sinking

On 30 November 1979 Salem left the port of Piraeus to load oil in the Kuwaiti port of Mina Al Ahmadi, on behalf of an Italian charterer. She loaded approximately 194,000 tons of light crude oil to be discharged in Genoa. The tanker, with its cargo, was insured at Lloyd's of London. She left Mina Al Ahmadi on 10 December and proceeded down the East African coast. On 27 December under the name Lema she entered the port of Durban, South Africa. There, the ship discharged 170–180,000 tons of cargo, and took on the same amount in ballast water in order to stay on a laden draft. She departed Durban on 2 January 1980. On 17 January 1980, under the name Salem, she was found off the Senegalese coast in distress. The British tanker British Trident rescued the crew of the sinking tanker.

Fraud

Four days after leaving the port of Mina Al Ahmadi, the charterers in Genoa sold the cargo to the Shell Group for 56 million USD. This type of transaction is not uncommon. When the British tanker Trident rescued the shipwrecked Salem crew, it was observed that not only had the crew taken all their belongings in suitcases but they had gone so far as to rescue a number of other items including duty-free goods and sandwiches. This was despite the fact that the tanker was meant to have sunk so quickly, after several explosions, that there was not enough time to save the ship's log. Far more striking was that, despite its ostensible cargo of nearly 200,000 tons of crude oil and having suffered sufficient explosion damage to cause her to sink, there was barely a trace of the vessel left on the surface.

Aftermath

After Salem′s loss, Lloyd's of London received an insurance claim of US$56.3 million from the owner of the ship. It was the largest single demand that Lloyd's had received up to that time. Research by Lloyd's revealed that the South African oil company Sasol, had bought the Lema / Salem cargo in Durban for US$43 million.

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