



Специфика контейнеров в Дудинке. С Яндекс панорам
Public date:Thu, 27 Apr 2023 10:04:55 +0000
Public date:Thu, 27 Apr 2023 14:41:57 +0000Рамблер.Новости
Владелец судна 30 Minutes рассказал подробности спасения моряков от пиратов
Владелец яхты 30 Minutes, которая подверглась нападению пиратов в Красном море, Дмитрий Чугуевский рассказал, как морякам удалось спастись. Как сообщает РБК, мужчина заявил, что на борт напали йеменцы, пока он плыл в международных водах. Чугуевский подчеркнул, что яхта не заплывала в воды Йемена. Пираты стреляли по кораблю из автоматов. Среди людей никто не пострадал, однако яхте нанесли серьезные повреждения. Благодаря мощному мотору морякам удалось оторваться.
Public date:Fri, 28 Apr 2023 14:34:07 +0000
Public date:Fri, 28 Apr 2023 15:44:29 +0000YouTube
Katie Melua - Concert Under The Sea (October 2nd 2006)
It was the stuff of dreams or, perhaps, acid trips: Katie Melua singing Nine Million Bicycles on a stage 303 metres below the sea. Convinced to perform on the North Sea floor by a gas drilling company celebrating its 10th birthday, the singer set a Guinness World record for the deepest underwater concert ever performed. Now a documentary of the strange event, which took place last October, has been released on DVD. And what an event it was. Melua, 22, and her band underwent rigorous safety training while 22 tonnes of equipment was transported by 16 helicopters and three supply ships to the rig and then the whole lot had to be moved to the bottom of the sea. Then there was the performance. We're guessing the chart-topping singer had never played to an audience quite like the Statoil staff. Kitted out in hard hats and orange overalls, a few swayed and tapped their feet, while others, unable to abandon their duties, continued working through the concert. Katie Melua - The Documentary Film: Concert Under The Sea is released on Monday June 28. (entertainment.timesonline.co.uk)
Public date:Sat, 29 Apr 2023 14:54:29 +0000Yemen
FSO SAFER UN-Coordinated Proposal Explainer April 27, 2023
Moored off the Red Sea coast of Yemen, the FSO Safer is a rapidly decaying supertanker holding four times the amount of oil the Exxon Valdez spilled. It could break up or explode at any time, unleashing a humanitarian and ecological catastrophe centered on a country already decimated by years of war. Such a spill would result in lasting environmental damage and profound economic costs across the region. A disruption in shipping through the Bab al-Mandab Strait and the Suez Canal would result in billions of dollars in trade losses every day.