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Tuesday 2nd October 2012 |
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Daina Shipping Co, owner of the Rena, has agreed to pay the Crown up to $38 million for the costs incurred in clean-up after the ship grounded off Tauranga last October.
Daina Shipping will pay $27.6 million to settle the claims of the Crown and public bodies, including Maritime NZ, Bay of Plenty District Health Board, Environmental Protection Agency, the Minister of Local Government and the New Zealand Transport Agency.
It will pay a further $10.4 million if it applies for resource consent to leave part of the wreck in place. "These agreements allow both New Zealand as a whole, and the Bay of Plenty region, to move on from what was, from an environmental standpoint, the worst maritime disaster in our history," Transport Minister, Gerry Brownlee said in a statement. "I am confident Daina Shipping will continue to take a positive approach to all elements of the wreck removal process and their legal obligations."
The Marine Legislation Bill, currently going through the parliamentary process, will substantially increase the amount of compensation payable by ship owners for incidents like the Rena grounding. Legislation is expected to be in place in early 2013. The Rena has cost the Crown about $47 million.
The Rena was carrying 1,368 containers and 1,733 tonnes of oil when it struck Astrolabe Reef on Oct. 5, more than 360 tonnes of oil leaked. Some 8,000 volunteers were involved in helping clean up the fallout from the Rena.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
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