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Ocean Ranger

Ocean Ranger was a semi-submersible mobile offshore drilling unit that sank in Canadian waters on 15 February 1982. It was drilling an exploration well on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland, 267 kilometres (166 mi) east of St. John's, Newfoundland, for Mobil Oil of Canada, Ltd. (MOCAN) with 84 crew members on board when it sank. There were no survivors.

Ocean Ranger drilling in the Cook Inlet
History
NameOcean Ranger
OwnerODECO
OperatorODECO
BuilderMitsubishi Heavy Industries' Yard in Hiroshima, Japan
Yard number615641
Launched1976
Christened1976
Completed1976
Maiden voyage1976
In service1976–1982
Out of service15 February 1982
IdentificationIMO number: 8767202
FateSank with all hands due to storm
General characteristics
Class and typesemi-submersible mobile offshore drilling unit
Tonnage25,000
Length396 ft (121 m)
Beam262 ft (80 m)
Height337 ft (103 m)
Decks2
Installed power7000 hp
Propulsion2 x 3500HP DC Electric motors providing propulsion to 2 Steerable Kort Nozzles
Capacity100
Crew84
Notesraised and sunk in deeper waters

History and design

Ocean Ranger was designed and owned by Ocean Drilling and Exploration Company, Inc. (ODECO) of New Orleans. The vessel was a self-propelled large semi-submersible design with a drilling facility and living quarters. It was capable of operation beneath 1,500 feet (460 m) of ocean water and could drill to a maximum depth of 25,000 feet (7,600 m). It was described by ODECO as the world's largest semi-submersible oil rig to date.[1]

Constructed for ODECO in 1976 by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries in Hiroshima, Japan, Ocean Ranger was 396 feet (121 m) long, 262 feet (80 m) wide, and 337 feet (103 m) high. It had twelve 45,000-pound (20,000 kg) anchors.[2] The weight was 25,000 tons. It was floating on two 400-foot (120 m) long pontoons that rested 79 feet (24 m) below the surface.[3]

The vessel was approved for 'unrestricted ocean operations' and designed to withstand extremely harsh conditions at sea, including 100-knot (190 km/h) winds and 110-foot (34 m) waves. Prior to moving to the Grand Banks area in November 1980, it had operated off the coasts of Alaska, New Jersey and Ireland.

Sinking

On 26 November 1981, Ocean Ranger commenced drilling well J-34, its third well in the Hibernia Oil Field. Ocean Ranger was still working on this well in February 1982 when the incident occurred. Two other semi-submersible platforms were also drilling nearby: Sedco 706, 8.5 miles (13.7 km) NNE, and Zapata Ugland, 19.2 miles (30.9 km) N of Ocean Ranger. On 14 February 1982, the platforms received reports of an approaching storm linked to a major Atlantic cyclone from NORDCO Ltd, the company responsible for issuing offshore weather forecasts. The usual method of preparing for bad weather involved hanging-off the drill pipe at the sub-sea wellhead and disconnecting the riser from the sub-sea blowout preventer. Due to surface difficulties and the speed at which the storm developed, the crew of Ocean Ranger was forced to shear the drill pipe after hanging-off, after which they disconnected the riser in the early evening.

At about 19:00 local time, the nearby Sedco 706 experienced a large rogue wave which damaged some items on deck and caused the loss of a life raft. Soon after, radio transmissions were heard from Ocean Ranger, describing a broken portlight (a porthole window) and water in the ballast control room, with discussions on how best to repair the damage. Ocean Ranger reported experiencing storm seas of 55 feet (17 m), with the odd wave up to 65 feet (20 m), thus leaving the unprotected portlight at 28 feet (8.5 m) above the water line vulnerable to wave damage. Some time after 21:00, radio conversations originating on Ocean Ranger were heard on Sedco 706 and Zapata Ugland, noting that valves on Ocean Ranger's ballast control panel appeared to be opening and closing of their own accord. The radio conversations also discussed the 100-knot (190 km/h) winds and waves up to 65 feet (20 m) high. Through the remainder of the evening, routine radio traffic passed between Ocean Ranger, its neighboring rigs and their individual support boats. Nothing out of the ordinary was noted.

At 00:52 local time, on 15 February, a Mayday call was sent out from Ocean Ranger, noting a severe list to the port side of the rig and requesting immediate assistance. This was the first communication from Ocean Ranger identifying a major problem. The standby vessel, the M/V Seaforth Highlander, was requested to come in close as countermeasures against the 10–15-degree list were proving ineffective. The onshore MOCAN supervisor was notified of the situation, and the Canadian Forces and Mobil-operated helicopters were alerted just after 01:00 local time. The M/V Boltentor and the M/V Nordertor, the standby boats of Sedco 706 and Zapata Ugland respectively, were also dispatched to Ocean Ranger to provide assistance. At 01:30 local time, Ocean Ranger transmitted its last message: "There will be no further radio communications from Ocean Ranger. We are going to lifeboat stations." Shortly thereafter, in the middle of the night and in the midst of severe winter weather, the crew abandoned the platform. The platform remained afloat for another ninety minutes, sinking between 03:07 and 03:13 local time.

All of Ocean Ranger sank beneath the Atlantic: by the next morning all that remained was a few buoys. Her entire complement of 84 workers – 46 Mobil employees and 38 contractors from various service companies – were killed.[4] While the rig was provided with an Emergency Procedures Manual which detailed evacuation procedures, it is unclear how effectively the platform evacuation was carried out. There is evidence that at least one lifeboat was successfully launched with up to 36 crew inside, and witnesses on the M/V Seaforth Highlander reported seeing at least 20 crew members in the water at the same time, indicating that at least 56 crew successfully evacuated the rig.[citation needed] The United States Coast Guard report speculated that 'these men either chose to enter the water directly or were thrown into the water as a result of unsuccessful lifesaving equipment launching'. Rescue attempts by the standby vessels were hampered by the adverse weather conditions and the conclusion that the standby boats were neither equipped nor configured to rescue casualties from a cold sea. As a result of the severe weather, the first helicopter did not arrive on scene until 02:30 local time, by which time most if not all of Ocean Ranger's crew had succumbed to hypothermia and drowned. Over the next week, 22 bodies were recovered from the North Atlantic. Autopsies indicated that those men had died as a result of drowning while in a hypothermic state.

In related activity the following day, the Soviet container ship Mekhanik Tarasov was struck by the same weather conditions as Ocean Ranger, approximately 65 miles (105 km) to the east. The battered Soviet freighter listed dramatically for hours before sinking with the loss of 32 of 37 crew.[4][5][6]

Causes and effects

 
Ocean Ranger's vulnerability to a rogue wave illustrated.
1 – For comparison, the Draupner wave 59 ft/18 m
2 – 28 ft/8.5 m
3 – Location of the ballast control room

The remains of the platform were found by sonar search over the following weeks, resting in an inverted position approximately 485 feet (148 m) south-east of the wellhead, surrounded by major items of debris such as the derrick. The platform had capsized bow-first, turning over and striking the sea floor with the forward ends of the platform's pontoons. The United States Coast Guard Marine Board of Investigation report on the disaster summarised the chain of events as follows:[7]

  • A large wave appeared to cause a broken portlight;
  • The broken portlight allowed the ingress of sea water into the ballast control room;
  • The ballast control panel malfunctioned or appeared to malfunction to the crew;
  • As a result of this malfunction or perceived malfunction, several valves in the platform's ballast control system opened due to a short circuit, or were manually opened by the crew;
  • Ocean Ranger assumed a forward list;
  • As a result of the forward list, boarding seas began flooding the forward chain lockers located in the forward corner support columns;
  • The forward list worsened;
  • The pumping of the forward tanks was not possible using the usual ballast control method as the magnitude of the forward list created a vertical distance between the forward tanks and the ballast pumps located astern that exceeded the suction available on the ballast system's pumps;
  • Detailed instructions and personnel trained in the use of the ballast control panel were not available;
  • At some point, the crew blindly attempted to manually operate the ballast control panel using brass control rods;
  • At some point, the manually operated sea valves in both pontoons were closed;
  • Progressive flooding of the chain lockers and subsequent flooding of the upper deck resulted in a loss of buoyancy great enough to cause the platform to capsize.

A Canadian Royal Commission spent two years looking into the disaster. The joint Federal-Provincial Royal Commission on the Ocean Ranger Marine Disaster[8] found that the crew were not trained, the safety equipment was inadequate, there were no safety protocols for the supply ship, and that the platform itself had a number of flaws. The Royal Commission concluded that Ocean Ranger had design and construction flaws, particularly in the ballast control room, and that the crew lacked proper safety training, survival suits and equipment. The Royal Commission also concluded that inspection and regulation by United States and Canadian government agencies was ineffective. In addition to key recommendations for Canada's offshore oil and gas industry, the commission recommended that the federal government invest annually in research and development for search and rescue technologies, such as improving the design of lifesaving equipment—a commitment that has been met in every fiscal year since 1982.

Aftermath

In August 1983, the wreck of Ocean Ranger was refloated and sunk in deeper waters by the Dutch firm Wijsmuller Salvage.[9] Since its sinking the previous year, concerns over the wreck's position had been made by the federal government. As the wreck of Ocean Ranger was situated at an approximate 30 metres below the water, the wreck posed a danger to shipping. The operation saw Ocean Ranger towed upside down with her two pontoons breaking the surface.[10]

Operations had commenced earlier in June. However progress was halted when two salvage divers were killed on the wreck by an underwater explosion on 20 June. A stop-work order on refloating the wreck was declared and an investigation into the incident followed. However, exploratory diving was allowed to continue. A second incident on 26 June saw a third diver killed, believed to have been hit by a dropped object as he attempted to return to the surface.[11][12][13][14]

Lawsuits arising from the sinking were settled out of court with a package cumulatively valued at $20 million.[15]

A permanent monument to those who died was created on the grounds of the Confederation Building, the seat of the provincial government of Newfoundland.[15]

A documentary film, The Ocean Ranger Disaster (2002), was released only in Canada.[16] In fiction, Canadian author Lisa Moore's novel, February (2009), depicts the life of a woman whose husband died aboard the oil rig.[17] Canadian folk singer-songwriter Ron Hynes wrote a song called "Atlantic Blue" (1988) as a tribute to the crew of Ocean Ranger.[18]

In 2009, a non-fiction book, Rig: An Oral History of the Ocean Ranger Disaster, written by Mike Heffernan, was published by Breakwater Books.

In January 2012, a non-fiction book, The Ocean Ranger: Remaking the Promise of Oil, was published in Canada by Fernwood Publishing. The book's author, Susan Dodd, lost her older brother Jim with the sinking of the Ocean Ranger and watched, for years, as her parents pursued legal struggles with the oil companies.[19]

References

  1. ^ "84 Feared Dead as Oil Drilling Rig Reportedly Sinks in North Atlantic". The New York Times. Vol. 131, no. 45226. AP. 16 February 1982. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
  2. ^ . Time. 1 March 1982. Archived from the original on 14 July 2008. Retrieved 25 July 2010.
  3. ^ "The Storm". CBC News. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 25 February 2002. Retrieved 25 July 2010.
  4. ^ a b Giniger, Henry (17 February 1982). "Hope Fades For 84 on Rig". The New York Times. Vol. 131, no. 45227. Retrieved 9 May 2011.
  5. ^ "Soviet Ship in Trouble Off the Canadian Coast". The New York Times. Vol. 131, no. 45226. AP. 16 February 1982. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  6. ^ "Last-minute fight for survival". The Ottawa Citizen. Canadian Press. 22 February 1982. Retrieved 4 July 2015.
  7. ^ United States Coast Guard: Marine Board of Investigation (1983) "Marine Casualty Report: Mobile offshore drilling unit (MODU) Ocean Ranger, O.N. 615641, capsizing and sinking in the Atlantic Ocean on 15 February 1982 with multiple loss of life" Washington, D.C., U.S. Coast Guard. Available at: U.S. Coast Guard: Ocean Ranger
  8. ^ Royal Commission on the Ocean Ranger Marine Disaster (Canada) (1984) "Report One: The Loss of the Semisubmersible Drill Rig Ocean Ranger and its Crew" Ottawa, Ontario, Canada: Canadian Government Publishing Centre. Available at: Government of Canada: Ocean Ranger: Report 1 of 4
  9. ^ . Thejot.net. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  10. ^ "Ocean Ranger wreck towed to deeper water - CBC Player". Cbc.ca. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  11. ^ "Incidents". Divers Association. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  12. ^ "An underwater explosion Monday killed two divers working at... - UPI Archives". Upi.com. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  13. ^ "Husky's undersea repair plans irk divers". Thetelegram.com. 18 June 2007. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  14. ^ "Canadian News Briefs - UPI Archives". Upi.com. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  15. ^ a b "25 years later, Ocean Ranger Tragedy deeply felt". CBC News. 15 February 2007. Retrieved 3 July 2010.
  16. ^ "The Ocean Ranger Disaster (2002, TV)". The Internet Movie Database (IMDb). 2011. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  17. ^ "Lisa Moore nominated for Man Booker Prize". CBC News. 27 July 2010. Retrieved 29 July 2010.
  18. ^ Lee, Philip (2006). "Man of a Thousand Songs". Saltscapes. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  19. ^ Dodd, Susan (2012). "The Ocean Ranger: Remaking the Promise of Oil". Fernwood Publishing. Retrieved 15 February 2012.

Further reading

  • The Report of the Royal Commission (Canada) on the Ocean Ranger Marine Disaster (Report). Ottawa: Canadian Government Publishing Centre. 1984. OCLC 607866939.
  • Marine Casualty Report: Mobile Offshore Drilling Unit (MODU) Ocean Ranger, O.N. 615641, Capsizing and Sinking in the Atlantic Ocean, on 15 February 1982 with Multiple Loss of Life (PDF) (Report). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Coast Guard. 1983.
  • Heffernan, Mike (2009). Rig: An Oral History of the Ocean Ranger Disaster. Creative Publ. ISBN 978-1-897174-41-8., an illustrated collection of first-person accounts from former rig workers, victims' families, government officials, media, and search and rescue crews.
  • Susan Dodd (2012) The Ocean Ranger: Remaking the Promise of Oil, Fernwood: Halifax. ISBN 978-1552664643

External links

  • CBC Digital Archives – The Ocean Ranger Disaster
  • Report of the Royal Commission on the disaster, via Library and Archives Canada

Coordinates: 46°43′33.53″N 48°50′9.13″W / 46.7259806°N 48.8358694°W / 46.7259806; -48.8358694

ocean, ranger, semi, submersible, mobile, offshore, drilling, unit, that, sank, canadian, waters, february, 1982, drilling, exploration, well, grand, banks, newfoundland, kilometres, east, john, newfoundland, mobil, canada, mocan, with, crew, members, board, w. Ocean Ranger was a semi submersible mobile offshore drilling unit that sank in Canadian waters on 15 February 1982 It was drilling an exploration well on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland 267 kilometres 166 mi east of St John s Newfoundland for Mobil Oil of Canada Ltd MOCAN with 84 crew members on board when it sank There were no survivors Ocean Ranger drilling in the Cook InletHistoryNameOcean RangerOwnerODECOOperatorODECOBuilderMitsubishi Heavy Industries Yard in Hiroshima JapanYard number615641Launched1976Christened1976Completed1976Maiden voyage1976In service1976 1982Out of service15 February 1982IdentificationIMO number 8767202FateSank with all hands due to stormGeneral characteristicsClass and typesemi submersible mobile offshore drilling unitTonnage25 000Length396 ft 121 m Beam262 ft 80 m Height337 ft 103 m Decks2Installed power7000 hpPropulsion2 x 3500HP DC Electric motors providing propulsion to 2 Steerable Kort NozzlesCapacity100Crew84Notesraised and sunk in deeper waters Contents 1 History and design 2 Sinking 3 Causes and effects 4 Aftermath 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory and design EditOcean Ranger was designed and owned by Ocean Drilling and Exploration Company Inc ODECO of New Orleans The vessel was a self propelled large semi submersible design with a drilling facility and living quarters It was capable of operation beneath 1 500 feet 460 m of ocean water and could drill to a maximum depth of 25 000 feet 7 600 m It was described by ODECO as the world s largest semi submersible oil rig to date 1 Constructed for ODECO in 1976 by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries in Hiroshima Japan Ocean Ranger was 396 feet 121 m long 262 feet 80 m wide and 337 feet 103 m high It had twelve 45 000 pound 20 000 kg anchors 2 The weight was 25 000 tons It was floating on two 400 foot 120 m long pontoons that rested 79 feet 24 m below the surface 3 The vessel was approved for unrestricted ocean operations and designed to withstand extremely harsh conditions at sea including 100 knot 190 km h winds and 110 foot 34 m waves Prior to moving to the Grand Banks area in November 1980 it had operated off the coasts of Alaska New Jersey and Ireland Sinking EditOn 26 November 1981 Ocean Ranger commenced drilling well J 34 its third well in the Hibernia Oil Field Ocean Ranger was still working on this well in February 1982 when the incident occurred Two other semi submersible platforms were also drilling nearby Sedco 706 8 5 miles 13 7 km NNE and Zapata Ugland 19 2 miles 30 9 km N of Ocean Ranger On 14 February 1982 the platforms received reports of an approaching storm linked to a major Atlantic cyclone from NORDCO Ltd the company responsible for issuing offshore weather forecasts The usual method of preparing for bad weather involved hanging off the drill pipe at the sub sea wellhead and disconnecting the riser from the sub sea blowout preventer Due to surface difficulties and the speed at which the storm developed the crew of Ocean Ranger was forced to shear the drill pipe after hanging off after which they disconnected the riser in the early evening At about 19 00 local time the nearby Sedco 706 experienced a large rogue wave which damaged some items on deck and caused the loss of a life raft Soon after radio transmissions were heard from Ocean Ranger describing a broken portlight a porthole window and water in the ballast control room with discussions on how best to repair the damage Ocean Ranger reported experiencing storm seas of 55 feet 17 m with the odd wave up to 65 feet 20 m thus leaving the unprotected portlight at 28 feet 8 5 m above the water line vulnerable to wave damage Some time after 21 00 radio conversations originating on Ocean Ranger were heard on Sedco 706 and Zapata Ugland noting that valves on Ocean Ranger s ballast control panel appeared to be opening and closing of their own accord The radio conversations also discussed the 100 knot 190 km h winds and waves up to 65 feet 20 m high Through the remainder of the evening routine radio traffic passed between Ocean Ranger its neighboring rigs and their individual support boats Nothing out of the ordinary was noted At 00 52 local time on 15 February a Mayday call was sent out from Ocean Ranger noting a severe list to the port side of the rig and requesting immediate assistance This was the first communication from Ocean Ranger identifying a major problem The standby vessel the M V Seaforth Highlander was requested to come in close as countermeasures against the 10 15 degree list were proving ineffective The onshore MOCAN supervisor was notified of the situation and the Canadian Forces and Mobil operated helicopters were alerted just after 01 00 local time The M V Boltentor and the M V Nordertor the standby boats of Sedco 706 and Zapata Ugland respectively were also dispatched to Ocean Ranger to provide assistance At 01 30 local time Ocean Ranger transmitted its last message There will be no further radio communications from Ocean Ranger We are going to lifeboat stations Shortly thereafter in the middle of the night and in the midst of severe winter weather the crew abandoned the platform The platform remained afloat for another ninety minutes sinking between 03 07 and 03 13 local time All of Ocean Ranger sank beneath the Atlantic by the next morning all that remained was a few buoys Her entire complement of 84 workers 46 Mobil employees and 38 contractors from various service companies were killed 4 While the rig was provided with an Emergency Procedures Manual which detailed evacuation procedures it is unclear how effectively the platform evacuation was carried out There is evidence that at least one lifeboat was successfully launched with up to 36 crew inside and witnesses on the M V Seaforth Highlander reported seeing at least 20 crew members in the water at the same time indicating that at least 56 crew successfully evacuated the rig citation needed The United States Coast Guard report speculated that these men either chose to enter the water directly or were thrown into the water as a result of unsuccessful lifesaving equipment launching Rescue attempts by the standby vessels were hampered by the adverse weather conditions and the conclusion that the standby boats were neither equipped nor configured to rescue casualties from a cold sea As a result of the severe weather the first helicopter did not arrive on scene until 02 30 local time by which time most if not all of Ocean Ranger s crew had succumbed to hypothermia and drowned Over the next week 22 bodies were recovered from the North Atlantic Autopsies indicated that those men had died as a result of drowning while in a hypothermic state In related activity the following day the Soviet container ship Mekhanik Tarasov was struck by the same weather conditions as Ocean Ranger approximately 65 miles 105 km to the east The battered Soviet freighter listed dramatically for hours before sinking with the loss of 32 of 37 crew 4 5 6 Causes and effects Edit Ocean Ranger s vulnerability to a rogue wave illustrated 1 For comparison the Draupner wave 59 ft 18 m2 28 ft 8 5 m 3 Location of the ballast control room The remains of the platform were found by sonar search over the following weeks resting in an inverted position approximately 485 feet 148 m south east of the wellhead surrounded by major items of debris such as the derrick The platform had capsized bow first turning over and striking the sea floor with the forward ends of the platform s pontoons The United States Coast Guard Marine Board of Investigation report on the disaster summarised the chain of events as follows 7 A large wave appeared to cause a broken portlight The broken portlight allowed the ingress of sea water into the ballast control room The ballast control panel malfunctioned or appeared to malfunction to the crew As a result of this malfunction or perceived malfunction several valves in the platform s ballast control system opened due to a short circuit or were manually opened by the crew Ocean Ranger assumed a forward list As a result of the forward list boarding seas began flooding the forward chain lockers located in the forward corner support columns The forward list worsened The pumping of the forward tanks was not possible using the usual ballast control method as the magnitude of the forward list created a vertical distance between the forward tanks and the ballast pumps located astern that exceeded the suction available on the ballast system s pumps Detailed instructions and personnel trained in the use of the ballast control panel were not available At some point the crew blindly attempted to manually operate the ballast control panel using brass control rods At some point the manually operated sea valves in both pontoons were closed Progressive flooding of the chain lockers and subsequent flooding of the upper deck resulted in a loss of buoyancy great enough to cause the platform to capsize A Canadian Royal Commission spent two years looking into the disaster The joint Federal Provincial Royal Commission on the Ocean Ranger Marine Disaster 8 found that the crew were not trained the safety equipment was inadequate there were no safety protocols for the supply ship and that the platform itself had a number of flaws The Royal Commission concluded that Ocean Ranger had design and construction flaws particularly in the ballast control room and that the crew lacked proper safety training survival suits and equipment The Royal Commission also concluded that inspection and regulation by United States and Canadian government agencies was ineffective In addition to key recommendations for Canada s offshore oil and gas industry the commission recommended that the federal government invest annually in research and development for search and rescue technologies such as improving the design of lifesaving equipment a commitment that has been met in every fiscal year since 1982 Further information National Search and Rescue ProgramAftermath EditIn August 1983 the wreck of Ocean Ranger was refloated and sunk in deeper waters by the Dutch firm Wijsmuller Salvage 9 Since its sinking the previous year concerns over the wreck s position had been made by the federal government As the wreck of Ocean Ranger was situated at an approximate 30 metres below the water the wreck posed a danger to shipping The operation saw Ocean Ranger towed upside down with her two pontoons breaking the surface 10 Operations had commenced earlier in June However progress was halted when two salvage divers were killed on the wreck by an underwater explosion on 20 June A stop work order on refloating the wreck was declared and an investigation into the incident followed However exploratory diving was allowed to continue A second incident on 26 June saw a third diver killed believed to have been hit by a dropped object as he attempted to return to the surface 11 12 13 14 Lawsuits arising from the sinking were settled out of court with a package cumulatively valued at 20 million 15 A permanent monument to those who died was created on the grounds of the Confederation Building the seat of the provincial government of Newfoundland 15 A documentary film The Ocean Ranger Disaster 2002 was released only in Canada 16 In fiction Canadian author Lisa Moore s novel February 2009 depicts the life of a woman whose husband died aboard the oil rig 17 Canadian folk singer songwriter Ron Hynes wrote a song called Atlantic Blue 1988 as a tribute to the crew of Ocean Ranger 18 In 2009 a non fiction book Rig An Oral History of the Ocean Ranger Disaster written by Mike Heffernan was published by Breakwater Books In January 2012 a non fiction book The Ocean Ranger Remaking the Promise of Oil was published in Canada by Fernwood Publishing The book s author Susan Dodd lost her older brother Jim with the sinking of the Ocean Ranger and watched for years as her parents pursued legal struggles with the oil companies 19 References Edit 84 Feared Dead as Oil Drilling Rig Reportedly Sinks in North Atlantic The New York Times Vol 131 no 45226 AP 16 February 1982 Retrieved 9 May 2011 Disasters Wreck of the Ocean Ranger Time 1 March 1982 Archived from the original on 14 July 2008 Retrieved 25 July 2010 The Storm CBC News Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 25 February 2002 Retrieved 25 July 2010 a b Giniger Henry 17 February 1982 Hope Fades For 84 on Rig The New York Times Vol 131 no 45227 Retrieved 9 May 2011 Soviet Ship in Trouble Off the Canadian Coast The New York Times Vol 131 no 45226 AP 16 February 1982 Retrieved 10 December 2011 Last minute fight for survival The Ottawa Citizen Canadian Press 22 February 1982 Retrieved 4 July 2015 United States Coast Guard Marine Board of Investigation 1983 Marine Casualty Report Mobile offshore drilling unit MODU Ocean Ranger O N 615641 capsizing and sinking in the Atlantic Ocean on 15 February 1982 with multiple loss of life Washington D C U S Coast Guard Available at U S Coast Guard Ocean Ranger Royal Commission on the Ocean Ranger Marine Disaster Canada 1984 Report One The Loss of the Semisubmersible Drill Rig Ocean Ranger and its Crew Ottawa Ontario Canada Canadian Government Publishing Centre Available at Government of Canada Ocean Ranger Report 1 of 4 Safety makes all the difference Thejot net Retrieved 25 March 2017 Ocean Ranger wreck towed to deeper water CBC Player Cbc ca Retrieved 25 March 2017 Incidents Divers Association Retrieved 25 March 2017 An underwater explosion Monday killed two divers working at UPI Archives Upi com Retrieved 25 March 2017 Husky s undersea repair plans irk divers Thetelegram com 18 June 2007 Retrieved 25 March 2017 Canadian News Briefs UPI Archives Upi com Retrieved 25 March 2017 a b 25 years later Ocean Ranger Tragedy deeply felt CBC News 15 February 2007 Retrieved 3 July 2010 The Ocean Ranger Disaster 2002 TV The Internet Movie Database IMDb 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Lisa Moore nominated for Man Booker Prize CBC News 27 July 2010 Retrieved 29 July 2010 Lee Philip 2006 Man of a Thousand Songs Saltscapes Retrieved 12 May 2011 Dodd Susan 2012 The Ocean Ranger Remaking the Promise of Oil Fernwood Publishing Retrieved 15 February 2012 Further reading EditThe Report of the Royal Commission Canada on the Ocean Ranger Marine Disaster Report Ottawa Canadian Government Publishing Centre 1984 OCLC 607866939 Marine Casualty Report Mobile Offshore Drilling Unit MODU Ocean Ranger O N 615641 Capsizing and Sinking in the Atlantic Ocean on 15 February 1982 with Multiple Loss of Life PDF Report Washington D C U S Coast Guard 1983 Heffernan Mike 2009 Rig An Oral History of the Ocean Ranger Disaster Creative Publ ISBN 978 1 897174 41 8 an illustrated collection of first person accounts from former rig workers victims families government officials media and search and rescue crews Susan Dodd 2012 The Ocean Ranger Remaking the Promise of Oil Fernwood Halifax ISBN 978 1552664643External links EditCBC Digital Archives The Ocean Ranger Disaster Report of the Royal Commission on the disaster via Library and Archives Canada Coordinates 46 43 33 53 N 48 50 9 13 W 46 7259806 N 48 8358694 W 46 7259806 48 8358694 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ocean Ranger amp oldid 1132739401, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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