Russian ‘floating bomb’ carrying explosives spotted near Kent’s coastline

519     0
Russian ‘floating bomb’ carrying explosives spotted near Kent’s coastline
Russian ‘floating bomb’ carrying explosives spotted near Kent’s coastline

A Russian ship with 20,000 tonnes of explosive cargo has been spotted off of the Kent coast today.

The Malta-flagged cargo ship is nicknamed the ‘Ruby’, but dubbed a ‘floating bomb’, was stocked with cargo in Russia in late August, before making its way towards the UK coast.

The ship had docked in Tromsø, Norway, where residents became panicked about the sheer amount of explosives stocked on board.

The Ruby is carrying ammonium nitrate – around seven times more than the 2,750 tonnes which devastated the port of Beirut in 2020.

The nitrate detonated when a fire broke out in the warehouse where it was being stored.

The chemical is highly dangerous. As well as being widely used in agriculture, the chemical is also commonly used in mining and civil construction.

A map shows the ’Ruby’ positioned off the coast of the UK  qhiqqkikrirqprw

The ship is off the coast of Kent currently (Picture: DataWrapper)

In some cases, it has been used in explosives having been used to make bombs in a number of terrorist attacks in recent decades because it is cheap and easy to obtain.

It was used in the IRA bomb attacks on the Baltic Exchange and Bishopsgate in the City Of London in 1992 and 1993, as well as the car bomb which struck Docklands in 1996, and in the Manchester city centre bomb attack in 1999.

Ammonium nitrate acts as an oxidiser, meaning that it draws oxygen to a fire, and can make it much more intense as a result.

However it is quite difficult for it to actually ignite, normally only doing so at very high temperatures.

Smoke rises after a warehouse in Beirut exploded from ammomium nitrate

The port of Beirut was destroyed after the chemical burst into flames in 2020 (Picture: Getty)

If it burns, the compound releases gases including nitrogen oxides and water vapour – and it’s this which can lead to a violent explosion as these gases build up and are then rapidly released.

Although any chemicals released into the air may quickly disperse, they can cause problems in other ways – for example, if it rains, the chemicals could cause the rain to be acidic.

Ammonium nitrate has caused similar explosions in the past – including the Texas City Disaster of 1947, when almost nearly 500 people were killed in an explosion caused by over 2,000 tonnes of the chemical.

Emily Hughes

Russia, Ships, Kent

Read more similar news:

01.01.2023, 00:58 • World News
Putin accused of surrounding himself with same 'actors' at series of events
01.01.2023, 23:11 • World News
Russians wrote 'Happy New Year' on drone sent crashing into playground
02.01.2023, 08:07 • World News
Inside US's most remote town 2.4 miles from Russia where only 77 people live
02.01.2023, 10:06 • World News
Russia suffers deadliest day of war so far as Ukraine strike 'kills hundreds'
03.01.2023, 17:43 • World News
Moment Russian airstrike lands behind reporter in explosion on live TV
04.01.2023, 06:57 • World News
Russian airstrike explodes behind reporter in huge fireball during live TV news
04.01.2023, 13:25 • World News
Putin orders warship with 7,000mph missile 'on combat duty' as it heads to UK
04.01.2023, 20:00 • World News
Russia blames own dead troops for giving positions away with mobile phones
05.01.2023, 13:25 • Politics
Do not repeat Russia mistakes with China, NATO chief urges the West
05.01.2023, 10:50 • World News
Sickly Putin will die very soon, Ukraine spy chief claims as rivals 'plot coup'