Coast Guard aids barge involved in southern Negros limestone spill

By Nanette Guadalquiver

September 16, 2024, 8:24 pm

<p><strong>LIMESTONE SPILL</strong>. B/Big Job tilts to its side and spilled its cargo of limestone ore in the waters of Sipalay City, Negros Occidental, on Saturday (Sept. 14, 2024). Its owner Asian Shipping Company Corp. is deploying another barge for the transfer of the cargo, according to the Coast Guard Station Southern Negros Occidental. (<em>Screenshot from Coast Guard Station Southern Negros Occidental video)</em></p>

LIMESTONE SPILL. B/Big Job tilts to its side and spilled its cargo of limestone ore in the waters of Sipalay City, Negros Occidental, on Saturday (Sept. 14, 2024). Its owner Asian Shipping Company Corp. is deploying another barge for the transfer of the cargo, according to the Coast Guard Station Southern Negros Occidental. (Screenshot from Coast Guard Station Southern Negros Occidental video)

BACOLOD CITY – The Philippine Coast Guard is assisting the crew of a barge that ran aground and spilled a portion of its limestone ore cargo in Campomanes Bay in Barangay Maricalum of Sipalay City, Negros Occidental due to strong waves over the weekend.

Ensign James Carbajosa, acting commander of Coast Guard Station Southern Negros Occidental, said in an interview on Monday that B/Big Job, a non-propelled barge carrying 7,500 metric tons of limestone ore, tilted to its side and cargo spilled out on Saturday afternoon.

It is one of the two barges of Asian Shipping Company Corp., the other being B/Big Sun, that ran aground Barangay Maricalum.

The Coast Guard report said B/Big Job and B/Big Sun, towed by tugboats Mabilis and Aidan, have 10 and 11 crew members, respectively.

All the crew members are safe.

Departing from the Garcia Hernandez port in Bohol, the barges were on their way to Rio Tuba, Palawan, when they ran aground along Barangay Maricalum in the southern Negros city.

Carbajosa said the owner would deploy another barge to Sipalay City to assist the B/Big Job in transferring the cargo.

Coast Guard marine environmental protection personnel will determine if there is damage to the corals, he added. (PNA) 

 

Comments