The vessel owned by
Grace Ocean and managed by Synergy Marine suffered considerable damage in the
incident with part of the roadway from the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsing
onto its bow. On 26
March, the container ship Dali was transiting out of Baltimore Harbour when it
lost electrical power and propulsion and struck the southern pier supporting
the central truss spans of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. A major portion of the
bridge subsequently collapsed.
New Delhi
Six construction
crewmembers on the bridge were fatally injured, one construction crewmember was
seriously injured. One crew member on board the Dali was also injured.
It took salvors until 20 May to refloat
the Dali, later sailing to Virginia to offload its remain boxes. The vessel
departed US waters en route to China in late September and had arrived at
Fujian Huadong Shipyard for extensive repairs.
Fujian Huadong
Shipyard is one of the major ship repair yards in Southeast China, with a ship
repair capacity of around 250 vessels per year.
The Dali is at the centre of a number of
lawsuits. Grace Ocean and Synergy have already settled a civil claim brought by
the US Department of Justice for the costs of clearing the wreckage and the
channel to the port of Baltimore following the bridge collapse for just under
$102 million. The owners and managers
stated that the settlement was not an admission of liability. Related:Dali
owners settle lawsuit with US Government
The state of Maryland is suing for the
costs of rebuilding the bridge which is has estimated that it will cost up to
$1.9 billion in a process that is likely to take four years. Grace
Ocean and Synergy are attempting to limit their liability to around $43 million
in a case that will now be heard in June 2026.