Clean-up begins after Maersk loses shipping containers in North Sea

A person walks past stranded containers in the area between Tranum and Slette beach, in Denmark, Saturday, Dec. 23, 2023
A person walks past stranded containers in the area between Tranum and Slette beach, in Denmark, Saturday, Dec. 23, 2023 Copyright Claus Bjoern Larsen/AP
Copyright Claus Bjoern Larsen/AP
By Euronews with Agencies
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The clean-up has begun on Danish beaches after dozens of Maersk shipping containers were lost at sea due to stormy weather.

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Debris has washed up on beaches along Denmark’s North Sea shoreline after a Maersk container ship lost boxes overboard during Storm Pia, just before Christmas. 

Maersk confirmed it became aware of the incident on 22 December, and is still investigating.

Authorities have issued a warning to ships about the containers and debris likely floating in the North Sea. 

Police cautioned residents against handling anything that washes ashore.

The Maersk vessel departed Bremerhaven, Germany on 21 December, and encountered rough conditions from Storm Pia

According to local reports, at least four containers have washed ashore. A possible 42 of the missing 46 remain in the North Sea.

Pictures in the Danish media show refrigerators, shoes, other consumer goods and medical items including needles washed up on beaches. Material appears to be scattered across nearly 10 miles of coastline.

Maersk has confirmed that at least 40 containers are believed to have been lost overboard from the vessel. 

Built in 2014, the Danish-flagged ship is 399 meters in length, making it one of the largest capacity vessels in the Maersk fleet.

Maersk said the ship will reach Gdansk, Poland on December 24, where the company will begin a full inspection in daylight. 

Unconfirmed reports suggest that there might be further damaged containers aboard the vessel.

Maersk told the local TV station in a statement they had hired a company to locate the boxes that were lost overboard. 

They said no crew was injured during the incident and that the vessel is currently operating without disruption.

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