Cargo ship with EVs sinks, threatens ocean ecosystem
A cargo ship carrying thousands of vehicles, including electric ones, has sunk to the ocean floor, sparking fears of a looming ecological crisis.
According to The Western Journal, the Morning Midas caught fire on June 3, roughly 300 miles south of Adak, Alaska, before sinking into water about 16,000 feet deep. The vessel was hauling 3,048 vehicles, among them 70 electric vehicles (EVs) and 681 hybrids, along with significant quantities of fuel oil.
The ship set sail from Yantai port in China on May 26, bound for Lazaro Cardenas, Mexico, when disaster struck. A fire erupted, and despite efforts to control it, harsh weather and water seepage compounded the damage. The Morning Midas sank while awaiting a tug for long-distance towing to a salvage port.
Fire and Sinking: A Troubling Sequence
Fortunately, all 22 crew members were evacuated safely shortly after the blaze began. Social media posts on X captured the ship engulfed in flames, a stark visual of the unfolding tragedy.
The cargo included 350 metric tons of marine gas oil and 1,530 metric tons of very-low-sulfur fuel oil, now resting on the ocean floor. While no visible pollution has been detected yet, salvage vessels remain on-site to monitor the situation. The potential for toxic leakage from fuel and EV batteries is a real concern.
The presence of electric vehicles complicated firefighting efforts from the start. A Coast Guard representative noted that ships had to maintain distance due to the risk of lithium-ion battery explosions, a hazard that’s becoming all too familiar.
Electric Vehicles Amplify the Risk
Rich Meier of Meier Fire Investigation in Florida pointed out the sheer volume of water needed to extinguish an EV battery fire—up to 10,000 gallons per vehicle. Multiply that by hundreds on a ship, and you’ve got a recipe for sinking before the flames are out.
Sean DeCrane of the International Association of Fire Fighters suggested the fire’s characteristics align with EV battery failures, noting issues like reignition after initial suppression. This isn’t just a one-off; EVs have posed similar challenges on land, as seen during wildfires in Los Angeles earlier this year.
In those California fires, electric vehicles burned longer and released toxic gases, adding another layer of danger for responders. When progressive policies push EVs as the future, one wonders if they’ve accounted for these unintended consequences.
Environmental Fallout Under Scrutiny
The sunken ship now sits as a potential ecological time bomb, with oil, gas, and battery components threatening marine life. While it’s too early to gauge the full impact, the idea of toxic substances seeping into the Pacific isn’t exactly a green dream.
Advocates of the environmentalist agenda might argue this is a rare mishap, but it underscores a broader issue with rushing unproven technologies. EVs are sold as planet-savers, yet here they are, possibly poisoning the very earth they’re meant to protect.
Contrast this with traditional vehicles, which, while not perfect, don’t typically turn a shipwreck into a hazmat crisis. The irony isn’t lost on those of us skeptical of forced green mandates.
Questions for the Green Agenda
Emergency response teams, whether at sea or on land, are grappling with the unique dangers EVs introduce. If a ship can’t be saved because of battery risks, what does that say about scaling up this technology without robust safeguards?
Monitoring continues, but the stakes are high. A disaster of this nature could tarnish the glossy image of electric vehicles, and deservedly so if the push for them ignores practical realities.
For now, we wait to see if the ocean will bear the brunt of this mishap. It’s a sobering reminder that not every solution branded as “sustainable” withstands the test of real-world challenges, especially when nature itself fights back.




