The Dali container ship departed Baltimore with a mostly new crew and eased under the Chesapeake Bay Bridge on Monday, sailing on its own power toward Norfolk three months after it veered off course and left a path of destruction that will take years to recover from.
The ship reached Virginia International Gateway, a major terminal in Norfolk, early Tuesday morning, according to vessel-tracking site Marine Traffic. It will offload about 1,500 containers there before heading to Norfolk International Terminals for repairs, according to the Coast Guard.
On Monday, the Dali was escorted by four commercial tugboats. A Coast Guard cutter, the Sailfish, enforced a 500-yard “safety zone” so other vessels wouldn’t get too close.
With memories of the accident that killed six construction workers still raw, authorities temporarily blocked traffic on the Chesapeake Bay Bridge late Monday morning “out of an abundance of caution” as the Dali approached, according to the Maryland Transportation Authority. (See photo below).
The National Transportation Safety Board said in an investigative update Monday that it had finished its in-person interviews with crew members and onboard testing of electrical systems.
On the day of the crash, the NTSB said Monday, two electrical breakers “unexpectedly opened when the vessel was three ship lengths from the Key Bridge, causing the first blackout (loss of electrical power) to all shipboard lighting and most equipment.”
In a highly technical update, the NTSB investigators said they found an “interruption” in a circuit for part of one of the ship’s electrical breakers. They also removed an insulated component that connects wires, called a terminal block, for testing in their materials lab.
The investigators emphasized that no conclusions should yet be drawn about the probable cause of the crash and that they are continuing to look at the design and operation of the Dali’s power distribution system and “all aspects of the accident.”