Maritime safety regulations are often shaped by hard lessons. Few accidents demonstrate this more clearly than the loss of the ferry MV Estonia in September 1994.Maritime safety regulations are often shaped by
Maritime safety regulations are often shaped by hard lessons. Few accidents demonstrate this more clearly than the loss of the ferry MV Estonia in September 1994.
Maritime safety regulations are often shaped by hard lessons. Few accidents demonstrate this more clearly than the loss of the ferry MV Estonia in September 1994.
More than 30 years later, the incident is still a touchstone for passenger vessel safety. Many of the stability and survivability questions it raised are influencing how ferries are designed and how safety regulations evolve under the SOLAS Convention.
The tragedy unfolded in the early hours of 28 September as the ro-ro passenger ferry was making its overnight crossing from Tallinn to Stockholm through the Baltic Sea. Weather conditions had deteriorated overnight, with heavy seas and strong winds affecting the vessel. Shortly after 01:00, passengers and crew heard a loud metallic impact.
Water began entering through the bow visor and loading ramp, allowing seawater to flood the vehicle deck. Within minutes the vessel developed a severe list. Less than an hour after the first signs of trouble, Estonia had capsized and sunk.
Of the 989 passengers and crew on board, 852 lost their lives.
Beyond the scale of
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