Salvage mission launched for disabled car carrier in Pacific, 3 feared dead

Merchant vessels responding to distress calls have rescued 16 crew members from a large car carrier adrift in the Pacific Ocean, about 1,800 miles northwest of the Hawaiian island of Oahu, following a fire, the U.S. Coast Guard said.

The Sincerity Ace, a Panamanian-flagged roll-on/roll-off vessel with a capacity of 5,200 vehicles, was headed to Hawaii and U.S. mainland ports with Nissans, and possibly other vehicles.

The vessel master reported a significant fire early Monday morning and intentions to abandon ship. According to the Coast Guard bulletin, three crew members are feared dead and two remain missing. Navy and Coast Guard aircraft, as well as commercial vessels in the area, are searching for the missing crew members in 15- to 18-foot seas.

The Sincerity Ace, built in 2009, is owned by Shoei Kisen Kaisha and chartered out to Mistui OSK Lines, a major vehicle carrier. Shoei Kisen Kaisha is formalizing a salvage plan and has dispatched commercial tugs to the scene, the Coast Guard reported.

No details about the cargo have been officially disclosed, but MOL’s vessel schedule shows the Sincerity Ace loading vessels at Nissan auto terminals in Yokohama and Kanda. The car carrier was bound for Honolulu, followed by Mazatlan, Mexico; San Juan, Puerto Rico; Port Canaveral, Fla.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Newport News, Va.; and Baltimore.

Nissan USA officials said they are looking into the matter, but would not confirm whether Nissan vehicles were on board the vessel.

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