Book Review: Into the Raging Sea by Rachel Slade(2018)
On Oct 1, 2015 An 800 foot container ship called El Faro(“The
Lighthouse”) inexplicably sailed
headlong into the eye one of the most
powerful hurricanes ever recordered in the late Atlantic hurricane season. All thirty three
crewmembers went down with this ship which crashed into the seafloor 15000 feet
down just SE of the island of San Salvador in the Bahamas where Christopher
Columbus first staked his claim to the
New World. How in this technology besotted twenty first century could such a
ridiculously improbable event have occurred? This was the task that a young Boston based magazine journalist named Rachel
Slade assigned herself to try to find
out.
At first the
assumed conventional narrative was that the aloof and somewhat arrogant and lightly
experienced ship’s master, a fifty something man named Michael Davidson on the
downside of a undistinguished maritime career
was just not paying attention as he blithely sailed right into the eye of Hurricane
Joaquin. There were no survivors. It was “pilot error”, obviously. Case closed.
It was just a task for the insurance underwriters to draft some checks to cover
the vessel and her contents and have the lawyers buy off any grieving relatives
as long as they signed non disclosure agreements. With no way to prove one
thing or another it was time to move on.
But for one
indomitably curious young woman journalist, that would have been what would
have happened. Ships in all ages have sunk, often without a trace. The El Faro
was a tragedy but the facts seemed straightforward to almost everyone except a
few dogged investigators at the NTSB who investigate transportation accidents
in the air and on the sea and to Ms Slade. As things played out there was a lot
more to this story than the blunders of one ship captain.
Accident
investigations have long established that while accidents sometimes happen as an Act of God, many more
happen because of a chain of events which lead inexorably to a catastrophe. With
no evidence but an oil slick and some scattered debris,investigators would have
had almost nothing to go on besides radio transmissions if there were in fact
any. In fact ships, even old rustbuckets like the El Faro carry position
transponders like Semi Trucks and a black box like airliners. The obvious first
task was to recover the black box and listen in on the last minute
conversations of the stricken bridge officers, just like cockpit conversations
and machinery and position and altitude data recordered by all modern
airliners.. These data recorders are relativelty robust instruments which
usually survive even fiery explosions. They are designed to emit a sound powered
by a battery which pings for at least 30 days. The approximate location for the
El Faro was known by virtue of its last transmitted signal. A research vessel was dispatched from its
homeport of Jacksonville, Florida to listen for the signal and recover the
black box if possible. It turned out that
after many days trolling over many many square miles of ocean, there
were no pings to be heard which either meant that the assumed location was
wrong or that the black box was dead or gone. The discovery of the Titanic by
Dr Robert Ballard in 1985 using a submersible named Argo has opened up many deep ocean mysteries. If you know where to
look and you have an enormous budget it is often possible to photograph and
even recover objects from the ocean floor, even two or three miles down. The
problem was there was no unlimited budget and they did not know exactly where
to look. The ship was old and at the end of its useful life carrying low value
cargo like vehicles and frozen food for Puerto Rico. The other issue was
overlapping jurisdictions without unlimited budgets. Even if somehow the data
recorder was found and recovered, what if there was nothing on it because it
was destroyed by the accident and the deep ocean pressures.
Perhaps at this
point I should lay out Rachel Slade’s book structure. It is basically in several
parts: the search and rescue and recovery and the investigation and
conclusions. If that were it it would be, you know, BORING. Rachel could have
perked up her story with human interest digressions like biographies of the key
personnel and their grieving relatives. (Spoiler alert!)What gives the book
gravitas is that over half the book reads exactly like a page turning novel with plot and conversations
and dramatic turns of events. Rachel did not make up these conversations. They were
taken verbatim from the 24 hour transcript that resulted from finding that
Swedish made black box. Some of those conversations were hard to even read and
fortunately the reader does not get to hear these interchanges and desperate
last moments as the 155mmph winds and 50 foot seas battered El Faro to death.
The book is excellently
laid out and organized in its search for how and why an old and worn out ship
ended up someplace it shouldn’t have been. AS might be surmised there are reasons and
villains and circumstances galore that Slade unearthed. They include bumbling,
evasive, complicated bureaucratic holding
companies under reorganization by bean counters with no nautical experience
looking only at the bottom line with reams of corporate lawyers to ensure that
no blame would accrue to the companies. The other players the US Coast Guard
and the NTSB come out a better but politicians come out at the bottom
as might be expected for cutting safety budgets and trying to influence
outcomes to suit their political interests. Then there are overlapping jurisdictions
and vague laws and unenforced regulations written to benefit the big guys at
the expense of everyone else, the US taxpayer included. Even the Norwegian
weather reporting and routing software gets implicated by its long delays and
bogus predictions. Even poor Hurricane Joaquin gets blame for behaving in ways
that baffled 29 of 30 National Weather Service
computer models, yet another US
organization with slashed budgets and over extended personnel. One of the more
interesting tidbits was the model from the European Medium Range Weather Forecasts(ECMWF)
absolutely
nailed Hurricane Joaquim’s meanderings and explosive development. It turns out
that the ECMWF is super well funded with crème de la crème scientists using the
best supercomputers and up to date evolving models. It is based in the UK,
Italy and Germany instead of North America which gets the brunt of almost all hurricanes.
Go figure.