6560 – via the sun-sentinel, right up the street!

A 544-foot-long cargo ship ran aground on a underwater shelf about 600 yards off East Las Olas Boulevard early Friday morning, the Coast Guard said.

The Eastwind ran aground at 2:10 a.m. near the area where ships wait to enter Port Everglades. Large seas and winds as strong as 25 knots made conditions difficult in the ocean overnight.

The grounding occurred at low tide en route in to the port, the Coast Guard said.

A Coast Guard marine inspector flew over the ship to inspect the situation before being lowered to the vessel from a helicopter to oversee response operations.

There was no damage to the ship and its hull was not breached. At this time there are no signs of pollution or any injuries to the crew, a Coast Guard spokeswoman said. The spokeswoman said officers are inspecting the ship. She said no attempt will be made to refloat the Eastwind on the next high tide until the inspection is concluded and the OK given.

A commercial salvage company has been contracted and will be placing pollution response gear in as a precaution. It is also making preparations to refloat the freighter.

The Greek-flagged vessel is carrying bauxite, an ore from which aluminum is extracted, along with paper and steel. It also has approximately 241 tons of heavy fuel oil onboard.

The Eastwind’s last port of call was New Amsterdam, Guyana. Its crew is mostly Greek and Filipino.

Current weather conditions at the scene are six to eight-foot seas with 20-25 knot winds.

The incident is under investigation.

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