17.7 C
Hamburg
Sunday, May 18, 2025
Home Port News Geophysical service provider TGS sued for US$250 million over Beirut blast

Geophysical service provider TGS sued for US$250 million over Beirut blast

US-Norwegian geophysical service provider TGS Nopec Geophysical is being sued by the families of the victims who died in the Beirut port explosion in Lebanon in 2020, with the plaintiffs seeking US$250 million in compensation.

The families are represented by Accountability Now, a Swiss foundation backing Lebanese activist efforts, and the suit was filed in the Texas court on 11 July.

The statement of claim alleges that TGS Nopec Geophysical’s subsidiary, Spectrum Geo, chartered the general cargo ship Rhosus, which was supposedly fixed in November 2013 to carry ammonium nitrate from Georgian fertilizer maker Rustavi Azot to Beira, Mozambique. The suit alleges that the ship, at Spectrum Geo’s request, diverted to Beirut to collect seismic equipment, and somehow, the ammonium nitrate was offloaded and stored in Beirut.

However, a subsequent Port State Control inspection found Rhosus unseaworthy and its crew were then repatriated, while the ammonium nitrate was offloaded and stored in Beirut. Rhosus was then abandoned in Beirut, where it remained till it sank on 16 February 2018.

The plaintiffs, all US citizens, allege that improper storage of the ammonium nitrate over six years caused the explosion on 4 August 2020.

At least 218 people died and 7,000 people were injured. Property damage estimated at US$15 billion also occurred as around 300,000 people were left homeless.

The suit asserts that chartering a vessel that is “recklessly unseaworthy and carrying explosives without the necessary permits, is a violation of individual contract terms, local law, and industry best practice, and is ultimately responsible for this horrific explosion.”


Martina Li
Asia Correspondent





Latest Posts

Hapag-Lloyd applies GRI on Pakistan–Middle East trade lanes

Hapag-Lloyd has announced a General Rate Increase (GRI) from Pakistan to the Arabian Gulf, Saudi Arabia (Eastern and Western Provinces), Jordan and Yemen, and...

Wan Hai Lines debuts new Vietnam–Thailand–India direct route

Wan Hai Lines has announced a new direct service, the Tamil Nadu–Thailand Express (TTX) service, with the first vessel arriving at India's Chennai and...

Red Sea Eases, but Carriers Wary as Suez Canal Pushes for Return

As the haze begins to lift over the troubled waters of the Red Sea, the Suez Canal Authority (SCA) is carefully balancing reassurance with...

MSC and ZIM downsize joint Far East-US East Coast service network

In response to the recent changes in demand for cargo transport from Asia to the United States, MSC and ZIM have decided to adjust...

US sanctions target Iran-China oil trade, stirring waves across global shipping

As Washington ramps up its campaign to stifle Iranian oil revenues, a new chapter is unfolding in the ongoing tensions between the United States,...
error: Content is protected !!