Brazil sank a decommissioned aircraft carrier in the Atlantic Ocean off its northeast coast, the Brazilian Navy has said, despite warnings from environmentalists that the rusting 1960s French-built ship would pollute the sea and the marine food chain.
The 32,000-tonne Sao Paulo carrier had been floating offshore for three months since Turkey refused it entry to be scrapped there because it was an environmental hazard, and the ship was towed back to Brazil.
The carrier was scuttled in a “planned and controlled sinking” late on Friday, the navy said in a statement, that would “avoid logistical, operational, environmental and economic losses to the Brazilian state”, it said.
The hull of the Sao Paulo was sunk in Brazilian jurisdictional waters 350km (217 miles) off the coast where the sea is 5,000m deep, a location chosen to mitigate the impact on fishing and ecosystems, the navy said.
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Federal public prosecutors and Greenpeace had asked the Brazilian government to stop the sinking, saying it was “toxic” due to dangerous materials, including nine tonnes of asbestos used in panelling.
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The Clemenceau-class aircraft carrier had served the French Navy for four decades as the Foch, capable of carrying 40 warplanes.
Defence expert and former foreign policy congressional staffer Pepe Rezende said the carrier was bought by the Brazilian Navy for just $12 million in 1998, but needed an $80 million refit that was never carried out.
After the carrier was decommissioned, Turkish marine recycling company Sök Denizcilik Tic Sti bought the hull for $10.5 million, but had to tow it back across the Atlantic when Turkey barred entry to its shipyard.
Brazil’s navy said it asked the company to repair the carrier at a Brazilian shipyard, but after an inspection showed it to be taking on water and at risk of sinking, the navy banned the ship from entering Brazilian ports. It then decided to sink the Sao Paulo at high sea.
The company’s legal representative in Brazil, Zilan Costa e Silva, said disposal of the carrier was the Brazilian state’s responsibility under the 1989 Basel Convention on the transboundary movement of hazardous wastes. – Reuters