The
owners of El Faro insist Davidson had a "sound plan that would have
enabled him to clearly pass around the storm with a margin of comfort
that was adequate in his professional opinion."
A friend of the captain agrees with the assessment, describing Davidson as a capable and experienced mariner.
"My guess is that he saw that he could outrun the storm, providing everything went right," Larry Legere, of Maine, said.
Legere,
an experienced captain in his own right, told CNN's "New Day" that he's
known Davidson since the 1970s, when Legere was a ferry captain and
Davidson served as a deck hand.
"Mike
was a very capable and experienced captain," Legere said. "He would have
weighed all of the factors -- the weather, the condition of the ship."
Legere said that deadlines to deliver cargo generally play into a captain's decision to sail.
"However, I don't believe he would have been pressured by the company, considering the weather forecast and so forth," he said.
How much margin for error the captain left is unknown.
It
was up to Davidson, as captain, to decide how close El Faro would get
to the hurricane's predicted path, said Fred Pickhardt, owner and chief
marine meteorologist at Ocean Weather Services.
"How close you come comes down to the experience of the captain, and the crew," he told CNN.
Regardless
of any guidelines, "the most important thing is the captain's
experience, the seaworthiness of the ship, and the experience of the
crew," he said.
The biggest compounding factor, he said, might have been El Faro's loss of propulsion.
A
ship that can maneuver can probably survive a hurricane by sailing into
the waves, Pickhardt said. But if the ship is disabled and getting
pounded by waves on its broadside, it will become more unstable, he
said.
Unpredictability
Tote
officials said they trust the company's captains to be the decision
makers, and that up until El Faro lost its propulsion, the reports were
not alarming.
The captain sent an email
to headquarters September 30 saying he was aware of the "weather
condition" -- the increasingly powerful Hurricane Joaquin -- and that he
was monitoring its track, though conditions where the ship was "looked
very favorable," Greene said.
Even with
improvements in modeling the paths of hurricanes, the errors of
uncertainty are still significant, said Lee Chesneau, a marine
meteorologist and professor who teaches mariners about the 1-2-3 Rule.
Hurricane
Joaquin is one example of a storm that did follow the predicted path,
and just getting caught in winds higher than 34 knots make it much more
dangerous to divert, he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment