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| The MV Wakashio ran aground off Mauritius in July and is leaking fuel into the island's pristine coral-filled waters |
The Japanese firm that operates a ship leaking fuel off the coast of Mauritius has been involved in accidents before, including a 2006 oil spill in the Indian Ocean.
Mitsui OSK Lines operates the MV Wakashio, which ran
aground on July 25 just off the coast of Mauritius, carrying 4,000 tonnes of
fuel that has been seeping into the pristine coral-filled waters of the island
nation.
Both the operator and the vessel's owner Nagashiki
Shipping have apologised for the spill, and pledged to help mitigate the
damage.
The accident is not the first involving Mitsui OSK
Lines. In 2006, the Bright Artemis crude oil tanker operated by the firm
suffered damage while attempting to rescue the crew of another ship, according
to a company statement from the time. An estimated 4,500 tonnes of crude oil
leaked from the ship into the Indian Ocean.
The leak took place far offshore and the spill was left
to dilute and vaporise after the firm judged the crude unlikely to reach land.
The company has been involved in other smaller
accidents, including in 2013, when a container ship it operated sank in the
Indian Ocean.
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Mitsui OSK Lines operates the MV Wakashio, which is
owned by Nagashiki Shipping
|
The Tokyo-based company traces its history back to
1878, when trading house Mitsui and Co. began operating a steamboat between
Nagasaki and Shanghai.
In 1884, the shipping operation was devolved to a firm
named Osaka Shosen Kaisha Lines, or OSK lines, under the umbrella of the Mitsui
zaibatsu, or conglomerate.
The firm gradually expanded its routes in the 1930s
and began carrying passengers and cargo between Japan and major cities in North
and South America, including New York.
It was renamed Mitsui Steamship in 1942 and -- like
many other Japanese private shipping lines -- was heavily involved in military
transport before and during World War II.
It survived the chaos of the post-war period and was
part of Japan's so-called economic miracle, involved in the export of Japanese
cars overseas and the import of natural gas to the energy-poor nation.
Following a series of mergers and acquisitions, it was
renamed Mitsui OSK Lines in 1999, and now operates 740 vessels around the
world, employing more than 1,000 people.
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Leaked oil from the MV Wakashio has been seeping into
the pristine
coral-filled waters of Mauritius
|
The MV Wakashio is owned by Nagashiki Shipping, which
is based in western Japan's Okayama.
The company currently owns 11 ships, including
container ships, tankers and bulkers like the Wakashio, a so-called cape size
bulker built in 2007.
The MV Wakashio had passed its latest annual
inspection in March without any problems, according to Japan's ClassNK
inspection body.
Nagashiki Shipping began life as a salt ship line in
the final years of Japan's Edo period (1603-1868), according to the firm's
website.
Originally known as Nagashiki Ship Department, the
firm also transported rice to Japan from the Korean peninsula, which was under
Tokyo's colonial rule from 1910 to the end of World War II in 1945.
The firm lost all its vessels after the war, but was
re-established in 1958 and renamed Nagashiki Shipping.



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