30 November 2014

Big Picture: This ship has sailed:

The beginning of the end has begun for India’s first aircraft-carrier warship, its 1971 war hero, and one of only six of its kind manufactured in the world.

The 10 men heave a sigh of relief. Had they failed, the next opportunity would have come after 15-20 days.
The 10 men heave a sigh of relief. Had they failed, the next opportunity would have come after 15-20 days. 
It is 1.30 am on a cool November night and the tide is high. Around 10 men get into position at Lakribunder Plot No. 10 at Darukhana. A hand signal later, three winch machines roar to life, yanking two-inch thick iron chains through the soft sea mud. They are attempting to move a 69-year-old, 704-ft-long, 21,067-tonne object closer to land. An hour later, INS Vikrant has moved 4 feet.

The 10 men heave a sigh of relief. Had they failed, the next opportunity would have come after 15-20 days. “Our work revolves around amavas (new moon) and bahaav (tide),” says a worker.
The Majestic-class aircraft carrier, the only such warship in the world still available of the original six constructed during Second World War — all of them since scrapped — is being torn down at Mumbai harbour. Its bow already gone, Vikrant looks naked. Vulnerable. Exposed.

The cutters and segregators at work on the site. Behind them are the containers with scrap already loaded.
The cutters and segregators at work on the site. Behind them are the containers with scrap already loaded. 

The last time the ‘Old Lady’ felt this vulnerable was back in 1971. The war was on, and Pakistan submarine Ghazi and the Pakistani Air Force were on her tail on the Eastern Front. “The Indian Air Force then attacked the Pakistani Air Force base. When Ghazi was sunk, Vikrant had a free run of the Bay of Bengal,” says a Naval officer, who served on board the carrier. 

Its crew eventually won two Mahavir Chakras and 12 Vir Chakras for their war efforts. “Vikrant helped shorten the 1971 war and saved lives,” says I C Rao, vice-admiral (retd), who served onboard as a chief engineer in 1975-76. “She was the only aircraft carrier east of the Suez Canal, with the exception of the one with Australia.”

Workers smelting the inside of the ship. They are being extra careful to rule out the presence of petrol, used on Vikrant
Workers smelting the inside of the ship. They are being extra careful to rule out the presence of petrol, used on Vikrant 
It served for 26 more years, before being decommissioned in 1997. On November 20, 2014, though, as the beginning of the end started for INS Vikrant, there were few from those days present to give her company. 

It will take 200 men six months, working 16 hours a day on an average, to cut up the ship and sort what’s retrieved from it to be re-used or sold as scrap. Every day, around 100 tonnes are being cut from the ship, translating into 50-80 tonnes of useable scrap. 

At the end of the exercise, new owner IB Commercial Pvt Ltd, which bought the ship from the Navy for Rs 63.02 crore, will earn at least Rs 100 crore as scrap. For the Mumbai Port Trust (MbPT) too, history is being made. Vikrant is the biggest ship and the first Naval one to be broken at the harbour, where shipbreaking began in the 1950s. It is docked at the largest of its 18 plots, spread over 3,000 sq m. The ship is stuck about 5 metres deep in the wet soil, making it harder to pull. At present, eight other ships are being broken down at Darukhana. Vikrant easily towers over them. 

*** Hariram Yadav, 58, oversees the work force of cutters, segregators, crane and winch operators. He is in charge of cutting up Vikrant, breaking its large chunks into smaller pieces, as well as segregating the scrap into rollable sheets, ferrous material, non-ferrous material and unusable junk. His men have with them around 100 cutters, welding machines, oxygen tanks, cylinders and metal content testers. Yadav, a contractor hired by IB Commercial, was himself part of the operations to pull the ship closer to harbour. “Double zor lagana padta hai kheenchne mein (I have to put in twice the effort to pull the ship),” he says.

The bow area falling off after 72 hours of trying to separate it. An important component, it was built to withstand collisions
The bow area falling off after 72 hours of trying to separate it. An important component, it was built to withstand collisions  

At 14,085 metric light displacement tonnes (LDT) — the weight of a ship without anything on board, used to determine the value of its scrap — Vikrant is much heavier than regular merchant ships, some of which weigh in at around 8,000 LDT. While those have large cargo sections and regular steel fittings, Vikrant has cabin rooms, hangars large enough to keep up to 21 aircraft, armament storage areas and is made of gun metal, a type of alloy heavier than steel. At 2.30 pm, on November 20, the breaking began from inside. Around 20 workers entered from the opening on the bow of the ship, from where the anchor comes out, to begin smelting her. 

They started with the 120-ft ramp, cutting off 10 ft, and moved on to the front of the ship, followed by the cable deck. In 72 hours, the bow was brought down. The workers had to made sure the fuel pipeline of the ship was clean before they began smelting. “Unlike other ships that have oil, Vikrant used petrol. Even kachra will burn if petrol is left, so we have to be very careful,” says Ram Yadav, 42, one of the cutters. That’s what makes cutting this ship different from other ships, he adds. Pointing at the broken part from a distance, vice-admiral (retd) Rao says the bow is perhaps the most important part of a ship such as Vikrant. 

With its watertight compartments, it was built to withstand a collision, keeping the rest of the ship intact. “See the protruding parts on the sides, that’s where the anti-aircraft guns, 40-mm short-range ones, were positioned. Further ahead, there were three large hangars, where aircraft were stored and serviced,” he continues. A week into the breaking process, around 500 tonnes of scrap have been removed from Vikrant. Washbasins and broken cabin rooms, frames of the bulkhead and the anchor winch peek out. Cutters first mark a part of the ship and begin melting the edges along it. 

A winch then tugs on the hook attached to the marked portion to remove it, cranes lift the part to a separate area, where it is further cut. Scrap is loaded onto containers at the plot itself. As on Thursday last week, five containers were half full. None of the scrap has been sold so far. With expensive non-ferrous and ferrous pieces kept in the open, security guards keep vigil day and night to prevent stealing, including from sea. 

*** The workers will move next towards the stern (end of the ship), parts of flight deck, the bridge, the operations room, the flying control panel, the mess decks, the engine room and the keel. IB Commercial Director Abdul Karim Jaka explains the process. Unlike the Alang ship recycling ward in Gujarat —the largest in the country — Jaka says, at Mumbai, the soil at the shipbreaking yard is marshy and the ships tend to sink into the mud.

Work on to break the 120-ft ramp inside the ship. By the end of the week, only 10 ft had come off
Work on to break the 120-ft ramp inside the ship. By the end of the week, only 10 ft had come off 

“It takes longer to break a ship in Mumbai. We have to break it linearly —cutting an upper portion, pulling the remaining part of the ship closer to land and then cutting below the waterline,” Jaka says. There is no fixed schedule, the cutting decided by tides and whether a particular part is cut or not. Alang has hard mud. The ships there can be broken from many points simultaneously as they do not sink into the soil. But Jaka couldn’t have moved Vikrant to Alang. Given its damaged hull, the ship wouldn’t have survived the journey. Jaka’s firm is involved in shipbreaking at both yards, but this is his first time with a Naval ship and he is restless to get to its engine room. 

“That’s the best part of this ship,” he beams, referring to the part of the ship that will supply him the largest amount of non-ferrous material. The engine room is approximately 400 ft from the bow portion. As per rough estimates, non-ferrous parts will fetch Jaka Rs 100-250/kg, while ferrous parts will fetch him Rs 25-28/kg. 

“Compared to other ships, this ship will give us non-ferrous content of a better quality,” he says. “Baki toh asmaani sultani hai (The rest is God’s wish).” Naval vessels always have more non-ferrous content, Jaka adds. “The Navy does not compromise on quality.” Jaka says he deserves whatever he can make from the ship given that it took him almost a year since buying Vikrant to start breaking it. He doesn’t know much about its history except that it was deployed in the 1971 war. “It helped us win. The warship made us proud.” 

*** It was in November 2013 that the Jaka family first saw a sale notice for the Vikrant. However, the auction was postponed because of a PIL seeking to stop the ship from becoming scrap. After the Bombay High Court dismissed the PIL on January 23 this year, bids were refloated and IB Commercial won in an online auction. The Navy confirmed the sale in April and IB Commercial made arrangements to tow the ship towards Darukhana starting May 15, when the tide would have been high and conditions favourable. But on May 5, another petition was filed before the Supreme Court. The latter gave an order maintaining status quo. Worried over the piling interest on his loan, Jaka wrote to the Navy saying he wanted to back out of the deal. Return the Rs 63.02 crore and keep the deposit till the case is resolved, he told the Navy. The Navy finally informed the Supreme Court that attempts to find bidders to turn Vikrant into a museum had failed and that it had been found to be unsafe. 

A Board of Specialist Officers constituted in early 2012 estimated the float worthiness of the ship to be a few months and said that any damage would result in free flooding of the ship. “It was time for, considering the deteriorated material state of the ship, insulation of electric wiring and systems, inadequate fire fighting and damage control facility on board, keeping the ship alongside any longer would expose her. 

The hull of the 69-year-old ship has become so weak that even cadets cannot go on-board for training purposes,” the HC order quoted the Navy as saying. 

Another aircraft carrier inducted into the Navy also required the berth occupied by Vikrant in the Naval dockyard in Mumbai, it added. Sensing the danger the coming monsoon in Mumbai posed to the ship, the vacation bench of the Supreme Court allowed IB Commercial to tow the ship to near Lakribunder at Darukhana. IB Commercial began seeking permission for shipbreaking from MbPT, the Maharashtra Pollution Control Board and Customs officials. 

Six months later, the shipbreaking began. “My experience will be a lesson for other shipbreakers who buy Naval ships. Emotions run high and shipbreaking gets delayed. I will not buy another Naval ship,” says Jaka. “Also, it is quite expensive to break ships in Mumbai.” 

*** MbPT only issues leases for a maximum of three months, at a cost of Rs 1.25 lakh per day in case of Vikrant. At Alang, shipbreaking firms can buy a plot on a long lease and cut multiple ships simultaneously. Apart from the high costs, a 3 per cent octroi is levied for shipbreaking in Mumbai, making the industry unviable, adds Sanjay Gupta, member of the Iron Steel Scrap & Shipbreakers Association of India. 

“Ship prices worldwide are high and have not fallen, while the demand and prices of steel have gone down,” he adds. The golden period for ship recycling was 2009, Gupta says, as the international freight market had crashed following the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers. “Now the industry is hit by falling rupee and the slowdown in the construction business. There is no demand for finished product, hitting the recyclable steel industry hard. The future looks bleak too,” he says. 

Workers operate under largely unsafe conditions at the port. While some cutters still wear helmets and gloves, most choose to do without any gear despite possible exposure to harmful substances. Metal shards, oil, flammable oxygen tanks and cylinders surround them, while the firefighting equipment is outdated. The burning sun and humid sea breeze, even in November, also make working tough. The men, mostly from Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Assam and West Bengal, work continuously from 8 am to 6 pm with just an hour’s break for lunch, for daily wages of Rs 350. For the duration of this job, they are staying in rooms at Kolsa Bunder, 300 metres away. 

This is the only work that most of the workers know. And most are oblivious and disinterested in the warship’s glorious history. 

The only ones to shed a tear for INS Vikrant or to try record its final moments, in fact, are former or retired Navy officials. While some regularly come to take photographs, they also keep their distance. 

“It is a national shame that we could not save an iconic ship like her. We sold our nation’s pride for a mere Rs 60 crore. Watching her being broken is like seeing our own house being brought down. I blame lack of public spirit and misgovernance by the state and Centre,” says Rao, adding, “She who once controlled the sea and ended a war is now part of the scrap world.” 

‘The Old Lady’ 

Nicknamed ‘The Mother’ by aviators, Vikrant was built in 1945 in Britain as part of WWII effort and commissioned in the British Royal Navy as HMS Hercules (the HMS standing for Her Majesty’s Ship). However, the war came to an end before she could be pressed into service and HMS Hercules was “mothballed”. “Lord Mountbatten was instrumental in getting her to India. The deal was signed in 1957. With Vikrant, the Indian Navy came of age,” says an officer. 

The ship joined the Indian Navy in 1961. It was India’s first aircraft carrier, at a time when India had only frigates, destroyers and other surface ships. Its initial air wing consisted of British Sea Hawk fighters and French Alize anti-submarine aircraft, later followed by Sea Kings and Chetaks.

The Vikrant in her heydays
The Vikrant in her heydays

She was also witness to the first ever successful underwater ejection in the Navy — the world, some claim —when Commander Peter Debras whose aircraft had fallen into the sea managed to eject from underwater successfully, skirting the ship overhead. During the war of 1965, Pakistan reported it had sunk Vikrant. However, she was only undergoing modification on a dry dock as there was a crack in a water drum of one of the boilers. 

In 1971, as India and Pakistan fought another war, Vikrant was stationed off the Andaman & Nicobar Islands, along with frigates INS Brahmaputra and INS Beas. “She was operated from Andaman & Nicobar as it reduced the flying time to East Pakistan and gave the aircraft more time over target. We sent out deceptive signals and the enemy was under the impression that she was stationed at Visakhapatnam,” recalls an officer.

Indira Gandhi with the crew of the ship that helped her win the 1971 war with Pakistan
Indira Gandhi with the crew of the ship that helped her win the 1971 war with Pakistan 
On the morning of December 4, 1971, Vikrant’s eight Sea Hawk aircraft launched an air raid on Cox’s Bazar in Dhaka and the same evening, the air group struck Chittagong Harbour. Attacks such as these cut off the escape route of the Pakistani Navy. “With their morale destroyed, surrender was inevitable,” says I C Rao, vice-admiral (retd). According to Naval officers, Vikrant launched more than 1,000 sorties in its lifetime. It was decommissioned in 1997 and turned into a museum, but in 2012, it was found to be unsafe. Earlier this year, it was brought to Lakribunder. A brochure at the time of the decommissioning read, “Sail well Old Lady, sail well. For we shall sail together again, when you and I meet on the jetty on the other side of time.” India now has two warships; a third being built indigenously is called ‘INS Vikrant’.

Source: Indian express. 30 November 2014

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