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Hundreds of residents are to be moved out of their council homes in Aberdeen after the properties were found to contain potentially dangerous concrete panels.

Around 500 homes in the city’s Balnagask area were identified as having reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) panels following an inspection last year, including 364 council properties – of which 299 are occupied by tenants.

Aberdeen City Council said it received an independent structural engineers’ report on 22 February with a recommendation to relocate council tenants to alternative accommodation “as soon as possible”.

Councillor Miranda Radley told Sky News: “For anyone who is concerned right here and now, we have made the offer of temporary accommodation to all of our tenants.

“But we’ll work with individual households and individuals on their housing needs and move them according to that priority.

“We’ve got a number of void properties – so empty properties – throughout the city that we have identified for the RAAC-impacted properties.

“But it will be based on the individual circumstances of each family and household – around where we house them, how we house them, and the timescale for that.”

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The council said its officers are “currently exploring options for the long-term viability for the site, which include remedial works or demolition”.

A detailed appraisal is expected to be presented to the council within six months.

The findings were considered by the local authority’s urgent business committee on Thursday.

Councillors accepted a recommendation from officers that tenants be permanently rehomed.

Councillor Radley said: “We’ve done a tabletop exercise of the properties across Aberdeen City Council’s portfolio.

“We are almost finished that and there’ve been no other property types identified.

“There’s still a few property types to assess, but at this point we’ve not identified any further.”

Read more from Sky News:
Concert hall to remain shut until 2025 over RAAC concerns
Big rise in hospitals confirmed to be affected by unsafe concrete

The committee asked officers to be available to engage with council tenants to “understand their individual needs and to support them through the next steps”.

The local authority said it has written to council tenants, inviting them to meet a housing and support officer in their home.

Owners and private tenants have also been contacted and offered support to discuss their housing options.

The committee agreed to set aside an initial £3m to cover the rehoming programme.

Councillor Radley added: “This is an incredibly difficult situation for everyone living in an RAAC affected property, but the council will be doing everything we can to support our tenants during this hugely challenging time.

“These are people’s homes and we need to ensure we support our tenants, but also engage with owners and privately rented tenants, to keep them informed on this matter.”

What is the problem with RAAC?

RAAC is a cheap, lightweight, “bubbly” material that was used in construction between the 1950s and 1990s.

It was mostly used for flat roofs – but also in walls and floors.

In the 1990s, structural engineers discovered the strength of RAAC wasn’t standing the test of time and only had a lifespan of around 30 years – putting buildings at risk of collapse.

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Search for missing crew member ended after oil tanker and cargo ship collide in North Sea

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Search for missing crew member ended after oil tanker and cargo ship collide in North Sea

A crew member remains missing after an oil tanker and cargo ship collided in the North Sea off the coast of East Yorkshire.

Dozens of people abandoned the vessels after the crash just before 9.50am, with the Coastguard rescuing 36 people.

All 23 on board the oil tanker Stena Immaculate are accounted for – but one of the 14 crew members of the Solong cargo ship is still missing.

A Coastguard search was called off around 9.40pm, while both vessels were both still on fire.

One of the 36 people rescued was taken to hospital.

Sky News understands there is a five-mile air and sea exclusion zone around the location of the incident, which may be widened to 10 miles if later required.

Read more: What we know about the collision

Tanker collision
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Both ships are on fire following the collision

The Stena Immaculate was carrying jet fuel and was on a short-term charter to the US Navy at the time of the incident.

The cargo ship was reportedly carrying 15 containers of sodium cyanide and an unknown quantity of alcohol.

Two maritime security sources told Reuters there was “no indication” of any malicious activity or other actors involved in the incident.

Ambulances leaving the scene after responding to a cargo ship and oil tanker crash in the North Sea
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Ambulances leaving the scene

‘Multiple explosions onboard’

US logistics group Crowley, which manages oil tanker Stena Immaculate, confirmed the vessel had released some jet fuel after sustaining a ruptured cargo tank.

The firm said it initiated its emergency vessel response plan and is “actively working with public agencies to contain the fire and secure the vessel”.

Tanker collision

Crowley added: “Our first priority is the safety of the people and environment. We will provide more updates as information becomes available.”

Read more: Environmental impact of collision depends on at least three things

Pic: Bartek Smialek/PA
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Pic: Bartek Smialek/PA

Pic: Bartek Smialek/PA
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Pic: Bartek Smialek/PA


Downing Street ‘monitoring situation’

The prime minister’s official spokesman said it was an “extremely concerning situation”.

He said: “We thank the emergency services for their rapid response. I understand the Department for Transport is working closely with the coastguard to help support the response to the incident.

“We’re obviously monitoring the situation, we’ll continue to coordinate the response and we’re grateful to emergency personnel for their continued efforts.”

Meanwhile, Hull City Council leader Mike Ross has called for the UK government to set out a rapid response plan in response to the events.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander later praised the work of the emergency services, adding: “The Maritime Accident Investigation Branch has begun a preliminary assessment and I am working closely with the MCA (Maritime and Coastguard Agency) as they conduct an assessment of any counter pollution response which may be required over the coming days.”

Coastguard’s emergency message

Moments after the collision, a message broadcast by the Coastguard warned other ships to stay away from the area.

In audio shared on social media, the Coastguard can be heard warning Solong “has collided” with Stena Immaculate.

“Both vessels are abandoning,” the message continued.

“Vessels who have firefighting equipment or can assist with search and rescue, contact Humber Coastguard.

“Stena is carrying Jet-A1 fuel, which is on fire and in the water. Vessels – remain at safe distance.”

Incident response unit
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East Midlands Ambulance Service sent an incident response unit

Incident response unit

‘Inspectors are gathering evidence’

The Marine Accident Investigation Branch is now investigating the collision.

A spokesperson said: “Our team of inspectors and support staff are gathering evidence and undertaking a preliminary assessment of the accident to determine our next steps.”

Tanker collision
Tanker collision

The oil tanker was sailing under a US flag, while the Solong cargo ship was Portuguese-flagged, according to Marinetraffic.com.

The Solong had been due to travel to Rotterdam in the Netherlands after departing from Grangemouth in Scotland on Monday morning, Marinetraffic.com shows.

A marine tracking website shows the ships close together. Pic: MarineTraffic.com
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A map from Marinetraffic.com shows the oil tanker (red) and the cargo ship before the crash

Map

Moving images on the tracking site suggest the oil tanker had remained stationary as the Solong headed straight towards it before the collision.

It is believed the Stena Immaculate, which was travelling from Greece to the UK, was anchored at the time.

David McFarlane, director Maritime Risk and Safety Consultants, told Sky News it can take up to an hour to raise an anchor – meaning the tanker might not have had time to get out of the way.

It comes as Martyn Boyers, chief executive of the Port of Grimsby East, said the container ship may have been on autopilot at the time of the crash.

“Autopilot just steers a course, they don’t deviate, there’s no bend in the sea,” he added.

File pic: NAC
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The Portuguese-flagged vessel Solong. File pic: NAC

File pic: Kees Torn
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The US flagged Stena Immaculate. File pic: Kees Torn

Grab from Facebook video https://www.facebook.com/NorthYorkshireWeatherUpdates/videos/1038422034982421/
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Video shows smoke billowing from the ships. Pic: North Yorkshire Weather Updates

Visibility in the area had been poor before the collision this morning, according to the Met Office.

“Areas of fog and low cloud lifting as winds increase through the morning, with some warm, if rather hazy sunny spells expected in places for a time,” it said on Monday morning.

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Environmental impact of oil tanker collision depends on at least three things

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Environmental impact of oil tanker collision depends on at least three things

The crash involving a cargo ship and oil tanker off the East Yorkshire coast is bad news for the sea, fish and air in the area. What we don’t know yet is quite how bad it will be.

That depends on a few things – but the speed of the collision, clouds of filthy black smoke from the fires and the leaked fuel are certainly worrying.

Firstly, it matters what was on board those two massive vessels.

Follow live: Jet fuel spilling into sea after tanker collision

Tanker collision

Analytics firm Vortexa estimates the 183m-long tanker was carrying about 130,000 barrels of jet fuel (kerosene), which is now leaking into the sea.

Jet fuel is not as sticky or viscous as heavier types of oil, thankfully, so it’s less likely to clog the feathers and fur of birds and seals. It can also be broken down by natural bacteria.

But it can still poison fish and kill animals and plants on the shoreline if it makes its way into the soil there.

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The Marine Conservation Society has pointed out the site in the Humber estuary is close to some protected areas and is important for seabirds and harbour porpoises.

And both ships will have been powered by a dirtier, heavier kind of oil – likely marine gas oil or heavy fuel oil, though we don’t know the details yet.

Heavy fuel oil is nasty stuff.

Pic: Bartek Smialek/PA
Image:
Pic: Bartek Smialek/PA

Cheap, thick and tar-like, it can smother animals and is very dangerous if they consume it, and is extremely difficult to clean up. Let’s hope this isn’t creeping around the North Sea already.

We don’t know how much of either the jet fuel or the oil powering the ships has leaked, or how much will be burned off in the violent fires – which themselves are ploughing black smoke and filthy air pollution into the surrounding atmosphere.

And we don’t know for sure what was on the Solong cargo ship and if, or what, will go into the sea.

Cargo ship ‘had sodium cyanide on board’

It was carrying 15 containers of sodium cyanide among other cargo, according to a report from maritime data provider Lloyd’s List Intelligence.

The container vessel was also transporting an unknown quantity of alcohol, said the casualty report – an assessment of incidents at sea – citing a message from the local coastguard.

Plastic takes hundreds of years to break down, and potentially can choke or trap animals.

Many of us have seen that uncomfortable viral video of a turtle having a straw yanked out of its nose. Previous accidents on cargo ships have seen plastic Lego pieces wash up in Cornwall 25 years later.

Read more:
How UK North Sea platforms dump gas

Secondly, the impact depends on the sea and weather conditions around it.

Things like the wind and currents affect how an oil spill spreads in the sea. Scientists can draw up computer models to simulate how the oil could behave.

Thirdly, it matters how quickly this is all tackled and then cleaned up, if necessary, and if it can be.

Usually the slower the response, the worse the impact.

The coastguard has said the incident “remains ongoing” and it has started assessing the “likely counter pollution response” that will be required.

Such a response might need the help of numerous public bodies: the government environment department, the transport department, the Environment Agency and the Maritime and Coastguard Agency.

So for now the best we can hope for – aside from the welfare of the people involved – is that not all the oil is spilled or burnt, that conditions are calm and that rescuers and those cleaning up can work swiftly.

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Passengers travelling to Heathrow Airport face delays on M4 after car catches fire in tunnel

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Passengers travelling to Heathrow Airport face delays on M4 after car catches fire in tunnel

Passengers travelling to Heathrow Airport are facing delays on the road after a vehicle caught fire in a tunnel.

“Due to an earlier vehicle fire, road access to Terminals 2 and 3 is partially restricted,” the airport said in a post on X shortly before 7am.

“Passengers are advised to leave more time travelling to the airport and use public transport where possible.

“We apologise for the disruption caused.”

AA Roadwatch said one lane was closed and there was “queueing traffic” due to a vehicle fire on Tunnel Road “both ways from Terminals 2 and 3 to M4 Spur Road (Emirates roundabout)”.

“Congestion to the M4 back along the M4 Spur, and both sides on the A4. Down to one lane each way through one tunnel…,” it added.

National Highways: East said in an update: “Traffic officers have advised that the M4 southbound spur Heathrow in Greater London between the J4 and J4A has now been reopened.”

The agency warned of “severe delays on the approach” to the airport, recommended allowing extra time to get there and thanked travellers for their patience.

The London Fire Brigade said in a post on X just before at 7.51am it was called “just before 3am” to a car fire in a tunnel near HeathrowAirport.

“Firefighters attended and extinguished the fire, which involved a diesel-powered vehicle. No one was hurt and the airport has now confirmed the tunnel has re-opened.”

Travellers writing on social media reported constrasting experiences, with @ashleyark calling it “complete chaos on all surrounding roads”, but @ClaraCouchCASA said she “went to T5 and got the express to T3”, describing the journey as “very easy and no time delay at all. 7am this morning. Hope this helps others”.

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