MV María Alejandra

The María Alejandra was a Spanish oil tanker built in 1975 in Cádiz, Spain. She sank suddenly on high seas some 130-150 km off the coast west of Nouadhibou, Mauritania on 11 March 1980 after several internal explosions, presumably related to malfunctions in the inert gas system. Of the 43 people aboard, 36 perished.

History
Name: MV María Alejandra
Owner: Mar Oil S.A. (Wilson Walton International)
Port of registry: Cádiz (Spain)
Route: Algeciras - Ras Tanura - Algeciras
Builder: Astilleros de Cádiz - Cádiz, Spain
Yard number: Nº 101
Laid down: 24 March 1975
Launched: 5 October 1975
Completed: 26 April 1976
In service: 1977
Out of service: 11 March 1980
Identification: IMO number: 7386233
Fate: Sank at 20° 32' N, 18° 13' W after internal explosions on 11 March 1980
General characteristics
Tonnage: 122.599 GRT
Length: 328.51 m
Beam: 51.06 m
Height: 26.18 m
Draught: 23.30 m
Installed power: 32,560 CV
Speed: 15,25 kts.
Capacity: 283.813 m3 in 19 tanks
Crew: 43 crew

She was the penultimate ship built by Astilleros de Cádiz, (Cádiz) one of the main shipyards in Spain. Before its completion the original customer, the Italian company D'Amico Società di Navegazione, canceled the contract. Finally in 1977 she was acquired by Mar Oil, member of the Wilson Walton group, to bring oil from Ras Tanura in the Persian Gulf to refineries in Algeciras in southern Spain. During the return trip from Algeciras to Ras Tanura (on which her fatal accident happened) the ship was unloaded, on ballast.

Accident

On March 4, 1980 the María Alejandra arrived to Algeciras Bay and unloaded the oil she brought from the Persian Gulf in the CEPSA refinery. During unloading the crew found problems with the inert gas system, which prevents explosions in the holds. The unloading ended on March 6 and preparations for the next leg back to Ras Tanura started next. In the first hours of March 8 she left port again, however the problems with the inert gas system were not fully resolved yet, and the crew were working on them en route.

After a stop at Las Palmas in the Canary Islands she was sailing south along the western African coast headed for the Cape of Good Hope and the Indian Ocean. At about 13:30 hours Spanish time on March 11 an explosion was felt aboard, suddenly followed by other explosions. According to the survivors the ship broke apart and sank in about 40 seconds.

References

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