Could the Titanic, Disaster Happen Today?
Stephanie Pappas
A century ago on Sunday, the RMS
Titanic hit an iceberg and sank to a watery grave, killing
1514 passengers. The disaster conjures images of luxury and hubris, cowardice and heroism,
as well as one haunting question: could it happen again?
In many ways, it already has, according to maritime experts. The Northern Maritime
Research shipwreck database, for example, lists more than 470,000 shipwrecks in North America
in the 20th century alone. Extremely deadly shipwrecks are much more rare, of course, but even
the infamous
Titanic disaster was only the sixth—deadliest shipwreck in history. The deadliest, the
sinking of the German h03pital ship the MV
Wilhelm Gustloff by Soviet torpedoes, killed more
than 9000 people. That disaster occurred in1945 —„ long after the
Titanic’s wreck in 1912.
Certain facets of the Titanic’s sinking are likely not to be repeated. But other risks still remain,
said Mahlon ‘Chuck’ Kennicutt II, an oceanographer at Texas A&M University. ‘You never can
completely eliminate risk,’ Kennicutt told LiveScience. ‘It‘s just a matter of trying to minimize it.’
In fact, the
Titanic disaster taught shipbuilders and crew plenty about minimizing risks.
Famously‚ the ship had too few lifeboats for its passengers, and the evacuation procedure was disastrous.
‘There are documented cases of people refusing to get into boats,’ said Charles Weeks, an
emeritus professor of marine transportation at the Maine Maritime Academy, and a member of
the Titanic International Society. It wasn’t immediately obvious how much danger the
Titanic
was in, Weeks told LiveScience, so people hesitated to jump into lifeboats being lowered into
the frigid North Atlantic. ‘The lights were on, the heat was on, so it was warm and comfortable,
particularly if they stayed inside,’ Weeks said.
Lives could have been saved if Titanic officers were more forceful in loading passengers
onto boats, said George Behe, a member of the Titanic Historical Society and author of several
books on the disaster. Behe credits one man, Fifth Officer Harold Lowe, with saving many lives
due to his insistence that passengers board lifeboats. Lowe also rowed back to the wreck site
after the ship sank, looking for survivors.
‘Having said that, though, Fifth Officer Lowe was also responsible for the deaths of a certain
number of well-to—do first-class passengers, since he later boasted to survivor Margaret Brown
that he personally saw to it that none of the
Titanic’s “rich nabobs” would find a seat in the
lifeboats and that those "nabobs” must take their chances on the ship with “good men",’ Behe
told LiveScience.
Better officer training and sufficient lifeboats would eliminate many of these issues today,
Kennicutt said. So, too, would better navigation aids that would have been more likely to
prevent the iceberg strike in the first place. Modern communication would have made rescue
more likely. “If another ship mid-ocean had an accident, I would expect a much higher survival
rate,’ Weeks said. ‘More crew trained to handle lifeboats, sufficient lifeboats, better radio
communications.’
Shipbuilding technology is certainly better today, Kennicutt said. For instance, though Titanic
was built to high standards in her day, 1912 steel contained more impurities than modern steel
and was more brittle in the cold.
But as Kennicutt stresses, there are always risks to taking to the sea. At any given time,
he said, there are an estimated 4 million commercial fishing vessels on the ocean, with tens of
thousands more cruise liners, oil tankers, military ships and private vessels beside. ‘Because
there are so many more ships, there are that many more opportunities for mishaps to occur,’
Kennicutt said.
Ships are increasingly venturing into Arctic and Antarctic waters that may be poorly mapped
and treacherous, Kennicutt added. In December 201 1 , for example, a Russian fishing vessel
hit an iceberg in the Ross Sea of Antarctica and took on water. The vessel was stranded for
almost two weeks and risked spilling its fuel into an important emperor penguin feeding ground.
Eventually, crew members were able to make enough repairs to get the damaged ship to
New Zealand.
Human error plus laxity around safety regulations are often to blame for maritime disasters,
Kennicutt said. In one deadly accident in 1987, the passenger ferry
Dona Paz collided with
an oil tanker. After the collision, a fire spread to the
Dona Paz, which was loaded down with perhaps twice as many passengers as it could safer handle. Only 24 people survived
the wreck, and the death toll is estimated at more than 4,000. ‘If you’re operating outside
the capabilities of the system, then you’ve really increased the risk of a bad accident,’
Kennicutt said.
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