This is from a boat pilot who messaged Max Igan, who reported this in his video below at around 15 minutes. The pilot believes it was an accident. I just thought I'd post it here, as the more information we have the more likely we can eventually come to a full understanding of the event.
Much investigative data to be gathered, however something not noticed (usually required osit), is that it seems that a ship of this nature coming out of port, around or under navigable obstacles (jetties, rock, bridges), should have had tugs. Again, did not see any or read that they were there - laws may not require. However, a ship of this speed (8 or 9 knots at the time) has little steering - so to make a turn of just a couple of degrees requires advanced adjustments to time a course correction over distance.
Tugs:
Applications Of A Tug
The usage and functions of tugs vary from port to port, as different ports have different requirements and intakes. The common thing is pushing or towing mega boats or barges. Their usage depends on the following factors:
The tug boats were among the first to have a steam propulsion engine, which the diesel engine has replaced today.
- Port traffic volume,
- Types of ships to be served by that tug,
- Navigational obstacles to be catered to,
- Conditions of environmental protection,
- Local laws and {have not looked this up}
- Domains to be carried by a tug
An average tug boat has 680-3400 horsepower engines (500-2500 kW), but those which are larger and venture out into deep waters have engines with a power close to 27200 hp (20000 kW) and a power: tonnage ratio ranging between 2.20-4.50 for large tugs and 4.0-9.5 for harbour tugs. These are incredibly high ratios, especially considering the ratio of cargo ships or vessels varies between 0.35 and 1.20.
Here is another guy talking about it, and he brings up the anchor issues - as opposed to the above and the Port anchor, it may not have been dropped until after it had happened, he says. It takes a considerable amount conscious preparatory time to drop anchor, even in an emergency it is still not fast (unless it fails (pretty wild here) - see video within Twitter/X link):