Baltimore bridge cargo vessel refloated

AFP

Recovery teams refloated the huge cargo vessel in the Port of Baltimore two months after the boat crashed into the Francis Scott Key bridge and caused the span to collapse.

Tugboats led the Dali to a local marine terminal after a successful effort to make the container ship buoyant, the US Army Corps of Engineers said on social media platform X.

The removal of the Dali marked a significant step in the Port of Baltimore's recovery from the boat's March 26 collision with one of the bridge's support pillars. The bridge's collapse killed six road workers and hindered traffic through the busiest port for car shipments in the US.

President Joe Biden praised the team that freed the ship from its weeks-long imprisonment under the bridge's wreckage in a post on X on Monday.

"It took the grit of workers and officials coming together to get this done," Biden said. "That's Baltimore Strong."

Maryland Governor Wes Moore said workers were on track to restore full access to the port this month.

Since the bridge collapse, authorities have opened four temporary channels to allow some shipping to resume.

Crews set off controlled explosions in May to allow them to remove a portion of the fallen bridge from the bow of the Dali, which had been pinning the boat in place. That allowed salvage crews to haul away the twisted metal wreckage using cranes and barges, and free the boat for refloating and removal, the Corps of Engineers said.

Federal investigators said in a preliminary report that the Dali had lost electrical power several times before crashing into the bridge as it was leaving the port.

Maryland state officials estimate it will cost up to AED 7 billion ($1.9 billion) to rebuild the bridge and anticipate completion by 2028.

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