The cargo ship that crashed into Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge was successfully refloated and towed away from the ...
As the sun rises on the Port of Baltimore Monday, the cargo ship Dali is set to be moved from the site of its catastrophic ...
It was back at the dock by 9 a.m. With the move of the Dali, the 700-foot-wide federal channel — the central avenue of commerce for the Port of Baltimore — will soon be open again. And the ...
“But I will not be satisfied until I can look over the same site and see the Francis Scott Key Bridge standing again. That’s mission completion.” Tugboats escorted the damaged Dali back to ...
The ship reportedly lost power again at 1:25 a.m. after two electrical ... The city of Baltimore in April sued the Dali's owner, Grace Ocean Private Ltd., and its manager, Synergy Marine Pte ...
Dali, the cargo ship that hit the Francis Scott Key Bridge and caused it to collapse, has been moved and refloated out from its current location to a local marina terminal Monday morning ...
Dali, a 300 meter (984ft) cargo ship, was refloated at high tide Monday and began slowly moving back to port at a cautious speed of 1mph, guided by several tugboats. The ship had been grounded at ...
The Dali was moved by tugboats "under favourable environmental conditions", according to the US Army Corps of Engineers.
The recovery from the deadly Baltimore bridge collapse reached a significant milestone Monday as the ill-fated container ship Dali was slowly escorted back to port, its damaged bow still covered ...
The Dali was moved by tugboats "under favourable environmental conditions", according to the US Army Corps of Engineers. Moving the ship is the latest step in clearing key shipping routes.