25/01/2011
As the
Sodruzhestvo (pictured above â ship on right) enters its 26th day of captivity in the ice of the
Okhotsk Sea, the agency
TASS was confidently reporting that she will be freed today. That news was posted early this morning, Moscow time and there are quite often updates issued. And, in the early evening here (England), it is in the early hours Wednesday in the rescue area, and all we are getting is an ominous silence.
We had been told from
diverse sources that the icebreakers
Krasin and
Admiral Makarov would begin to pilot the factory ship from the ice. The
Krasin was first into the ice after refuelling, and had forced its way to the factory ship. The
Admiral Makarov was following, making the escape channel wider.
The two icebreakers were then to operate in tandem, leading the
Sodruzhestvo to ice-free water for about 50 miles across heavy hummocky ice. The weather conditions
were said to be favourable and the last we had heard was that the
Krasin had been clearing the
Sodruzhestvo from ice and preparing a channel for towing.
Meanwhile, as this drama plays out, US Rear Admiral Dave Titley, at an Arctic conference in Tromsø, Norway,
is telling us that commercial ships could be sailing across an ice-free North Pole as soon as 2035.
Titley predicted that, as the ice-free period gradually increased, the Bering Strait between the US and Russia would begin to rival the Persian Gulf and the Straits of Malacca between Malaysia and Indonesia as one of the world's most important shipping lanes.
This, no doubt, will come as music to the ears the crew of the
Sodruzhestvo, who might also be entertained by the total lack of Western media coverage. The
only news from that source, coming out of the region concerns a "rare whale" which has left the Bering Sea and is heading for the Gulf of Alaska.
Researchers have been tracking the whale since they tagged it off Russia's Sakhalin Island on 4 October, and the media is showing far more interest in this solitary mammal than it is the fate of over 400 trapped crew. It would be nice to think that the Japanese had a whaler handy to do a bit of quick "research", which could then grace the plates of Tokyo diners.
COMMENT: OKHOTSK SEA CRISIS