The UK Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) has published its report on the investigation into a cargo vessel mooring incident that left one person dead in the Port of Kavkaz in Russia.
On August 30, 2021, the chief officer of the general cargo vessel Teal Bay was fatally injured when he was struck by a mooring line when it sprang out of an open roller fairlead.
Teal Bay was moored alongside an anchored bulk carrier, and the former was being moved forward by tensioning the aft spring to allow loading to be completed.
During the loading operation, Teal Bay's mooring lines developed an upward lead due to the change in freeboard between the two vessels and, as the line was tensioned to move Teal Bay, its upward lead angle became too great for the open fairlead to contain it.
The investigation found that the use of an open fairlead was inappropriate during the transfer of cargo where a freeboard differential created the hazard of an upward lead on the mooring lines.
Teal Bay's chief officer was struck because he was standing in a hazardous area close to a tensioned mooring line. Also, the operation to move the vessel forward was attempted with insufficient crew and had not been risk assessed.
The MAIB conducted this investigation on behalf of the Isle of Man Ship Registry in accordance with the Memorandum of Understanding between the MAIB and the Red Ensign Group Category 1 registries of Isle of Man, Cayman Islands, Bermuda and Gibraltar.
Safety issues
Recommendations
A recommendation has been made to the Isle of Man Ship Registry to promulgate the safety lessons in this report to vessels on the register.