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- Greater than 60 containers toppled off a vessel at California’s Port of Lengthy Seaside.
- The containers fell off the Mississippi, an 837-foot-long, Portugal-flagged ship.
- No accidents have been reported from the incident.
Dozens of containers fell off a vessel docked at Southern California’s Port of Long Beach on Tuesday morning.
The US Coast Guard confirmed to Enterprise Insider that it acquired a report about 67 delivery containers falling into the water.
The vessel in query was the Mississippi, an 837-foot Portugal-flagged ship, per a report by Reuters. In response to information from Vessel Finder, a ship monitoring platform, the ship is a 12 months previous and had arrived in Lengthy Seaside from Yantian, China, on Tuesday.
The Coast Guard informed the AFP that the incident had occurred at about 9 a.m. native time on Tuesday, and no accidents had been reported.
A consultant of the port didn’t reply to a request for remark from Enterprise Insider.
67 containers toppled into the water surrounding the barge
Apu Gomes/Getty Images
Helicopter footage by ABC Los Angeles’ affiliate KABC confirmed dozens of containers floating within the waters surrounding the barge.
Some gave the impression to be half-submerged. A number of containers that remained on the vessel had huge dents.
Images present a stack of leaning containers on the barge
PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images
Images of the scene present that a number of containers that remained on the ship have been leaning precariously off the ship.
AFP stated in a report that whereas it was not clear what was within the containers, journalists on the bottom noticed sneakers and garments floating within the water.
Port of Lengthy Seaside is likely one of the US’s busiest ports
Screengrab/Alan Devall, Sarah Wemy/ Reuters
The incident occurred at California’s Port of Lengthy Seaside, a 3,200-acre container port close to Los Angeles. It is likely one of the busiest ports within the nation.
Per its web site, the port strikes $300 billion price of cargo yearly. It has six container terminals and 73 gantry cranes.
