Wednesday, February 11, 2015

DEADLY EXPLOSION ON BRAZIL OIL SHIP LEASED BY PETROBRAS; LABOR UNION SAYS 3 DEATHS and AT LEAST 6 MISSING



 



DEADLY EXPLOSION ON BRAZIL OIL SHIP LEASED BY PETROBRAS; LABOR UNION SAYS 3 DEATHS and AT LEAST 6 MISSING





February 11, 2015




RIO DE JANEIRO — An explosion on a ship leased by state-run oil company Petrobras left three workers dead and another six missing on Wednesday, according to Brazil's biggest oil industry union.




The Health Ministry for the state of Espirito Santo, where the explosion took place, said in an emailed statement that so far 10 workers have been treated for injuries — two for "grave burns" and another eight for "trauma."




The Unified Oilworkers Federation said in a statement on its website that the blast was caused by a gas leak in the engine room of the vessel, one of the many floating oil production, storage and offloading units that Petrobras employs in developing Brazil's massive offshore oil fields.




The union said the other 32 workers were safely evacuated off the ship onto a smaller vessel, and that a fire on the Petrobras ship is under control and "there are no risks of more explosions." It was not clear what the overall condition of the vessel was.




The government of Espirito Santo state confirmed there was an explosion on the Cidade de Sao Mateus ship, located about 370 miles (600 kilometers) northeast of Rio de Janeiro, but couldn't confirm the numbers killed, missing or injured.




The accident comes amid a crisis for Petrobras, as federal investigators continue to probe a massive kickback scheme allegedly operated by former executives of the oil company, which saw them receiving hundreds of millions in bribes from construction and engineering firms in exchange for giving those companies inflated contracts.




Petrobras didn't respond to telephone and email requests for comment.



The ship was leased by Petrobras starting in 2009 from Norway-based BW Offshore, according to the Norwegian firm's website, with a contract running at least to 2018.