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Manufacturing

Antrim company Fast Engineering helps UN prevent environmental disaster in Red Sea

The companies containment units are in position to capture potential oil spills from a super tanker held hostage off the coast of Yemen

Kate and Seamus Connolly, Company Secretary and Managing Director of Fast Engineering respectively

A Northern Ireland company is working alongside the United Nations to help prevent a humanitarian and environmental disaster in the Red Sea.

Antrim firm Fast Engineering Ltd is supporting the UN Development Programme, as well as the International Maritime Organization, by positioning their portable FASTANK containment units at the mouth of the Red Sea in the event of a loaded oil super tanker rupturing or exploding.

FSO Safer, a floating storage vessel moored off the coast of Yemen, holds more than 1.14 million barrels of oil valued at up to $88 million. It has been held hostage, as a bargaining chip, since the start of Yemen’s civil war in 2015.

With the supertanker being in an advanced state of decay, it has the potential to create one of the biggest oils spills in history.

By comparison, FSO Safer has a capacity which is four times that of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska.

“Not only would shipping be prevented from using the Suez Canal, one of the world’s busiest trade routes, but humanitarian aid would also not be able to access Yemen ports,” Seamus Connolly, Managing Director of Fast Engineering and inventor of FASTANK, said. “The fishing industry in the region would be decimated, with a loss of thousands of jobs and countless animals would die.

“Clean-up operations would take decades, with current estimates upwards of $20 billion,”

Fast Engineering was asked to urgently air freight the entirety of their FASTANK stock to Djibouti, located across the narrow straights from where the FSO Safer is moored.