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Existing concepts in the law of the sea: possible bases for places of refuge?

On 11 November 2002 the Bahamian registered tanker, the Prestige, laden with 77,000 tons of heavy oil en-route from Latvia to Singapore developed a 10 meter crack in the hull in heavy weather off Cape Finisterre. On the 13 th it sent out a distress signal that the hull had ruptured and oil was leaki...

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Main Author: Roux, Pierre
Other Authors: Devine, Derry
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Shipping Law Unit 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Roux, Pierre
author2 Devine, Derry
author_browse Devine, Derry
Roux, Pierre
author_facet Devine, Derry
Roux, Pierre
author_sort Roux, Pierre
collection Thesis
description On 11 November 2002 the Bahamian registered tanker, the Prestige, laden with 77,000 tons of heavy oil en-route from Latvia to Singapore developed a 10 meter crack in the hull in heavy weather off Cape Finisterre. On the 13 th it sent out a distress signal that the hull had ruptured and oil was leaking. It was then 35 nm offshore and drifting shorewards. On the 14 th it was taken in tow by a salvage team, which succeeded in stabilising it. It requested permission to be towed into the calmer waters of a sheltered harbour to transfer its cargo to another tanker. France, the UK and nearby Spain and Portugal refused permission, fearing pollution and explosion in a confined harbour area. Under Spanish orders and shadowed by a naval frigate the Prestige was towed out to sea and then south towards Portuguese waters. Rough seas damaged it further and on the 15 th the master abandoned ship. Meanwhile, about 6,000 tons of oil escaped and were polluting the Spanish coast, fouling beaches and seabirds and closing fisheries and shellfish beds. It caused a political storm onshore and within the European Union. Portugal then dispatched a frigate to push the tugs westwards, further out to sea. On the 19 th the Prestige, buffeted by huge waves for a week, split apart and sank 145 nm off the Spanish coast near the Portuguese EEZ, causing the worst oil spill since the grounding of the Exxon Valdez in 1989. The oil spread was driven onshore polluting 290 km of Spanish coastline. If the tanker had been given shelter in a small bay the pollution could easily have been contained. It also threatened to pollute the coasts of France and Portugal. In the wake of the Prestige disaster, Spain and Portugal were blamed for exacerbating what should have been a minor oil spill by refusing to give the tanker permission to dock in a sheltered area.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:11.035Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42035 Existing concepts in the law of the sea: possible bases for places of refuge? Roux, Pierre Devine, Derry Law Sea On 11 November 2002 the Bahamian registered tanker, the Prestige, laden with 77,000 tons of heavy oil en-route from Latvia to Singapore developed a 10 meter crack in the hull in heavy weather off Cape Finisterre. On the 13 th it sent out a distress signal that the hull had ruptured and oil was leaking. It was then 35 nm offshore and drifting shorewards. On the 14 th it was taken in tow by a salvage team, which succeeded in stabilising it. It requested permission to be towed into the calmer waters of a sheltered harbour to transfer its cargo to another tanker. France, the UK and nearby Spain and Portugal refused permission, fearing pollution and explosion in a confined harbour area. Under Spanish orders and shadowed by a naval frigate the Prestige was towed out to sea and then south towards Portuguese waters. Rough seas damaged it further and on the 15 th the master abandoned ship. Meanwhile, about 6,000 tons of oil escaped and were polluting the Spanish coast, fouling beaches and seabirds and closing fisheries and shellfish beds. It caused a political storm onshore and within the European Union. Portugal then dispatched a frigate to push the tugs westwards, further out to sea. On the 19 th the Prestige, buffeted by huge waves for a week, split apart and sank 145 nm off the Spanish coast near the Portuguese EEZ, causing the worst oil spill since the grounding of the Exxon Valdez in 1989. The oil spread was driven onshore polluting 290 km of Spanish coastline. If the tanker had been given shelter in a small bay the pollution could easily have been contained. It also threatened to pollute the coasts of France and Portugal. In the wake of the Prestige disaster, Spain and Portugal were blamed for exacerbating what should have been a minor oil spill by refusing to give the tanker permission to dock in a sheltered area. 2025-10-24T10:17:27Z 2025-10-24T10:17:27Z 2004 2025-10-24T09:45:20Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42035 en eng application/pdf Shipping Law Unit Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Law
Sea
Roux, Pierre
Existing concepts in the law of the sea: possible bases for places of refuge?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Existing concepts in the law of the sea: possible bases for places of refuge?
title_full Existing concepts in the law of the sea: possible bases for places of refuge?
title_fullStr Existing concepts in the law of the sea: possible bases for places of refuge?
title_full_unstemmed Existing concepts in the law of the sea: possible bases for places of refuge?
title_short Existing concepts in the law of the sea: possible bases for places of refuge?
title_sort existing concepts in the law of the sea possible bases for places of refuge
topic Law
Sea
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42035
work_keys_str_mv AT rouxpierre existingconceptsinthelawoftheseapossiblebasesforplacesofrefuge