18/02/2026
One loose connection !
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It was not heavy weather.
It was not a collision.
It was not a navigational mistake.
It began with a loose electrical connection.
In the early hours of 26 March 2024, the container ship MV Dali departed the Port of Baltimore on a routine outbound voyage. The weather was calm. Visibility was good. The vessel was proceeding through the Patapsco River shipping channel under pilotage.
Ahead lay the Francis Scott Key Bridge — a vital roadway link spanning one of America’s busiest ports.
Shortly after departure, the vessel experienced electrical power fluctuations. Lights flickered. Systems went dark. Power was restored briefly — then lost again.
A final, complete blackout disabled propulsion and steering control.
Without electrical power, a modern container ship becomes momentum without command. In restricted waters, there is little margin for recovery. A mayday call was transmitted. Anchors were deployed in an attempt to slow the vessel. But distance and time were limited.
At approximately 6–7 knots, Dali struck a main support pier of the bridge.
Within seconds, the structure collapsed.
Six roadway workers conducting overnight maintenance lost their lives. The Port of Baltimore was effectively shut down. Commercial traffic halted. What began as a machinery failure aboard a single vessel escalated into a national infrastructure emergency.
According to investigative findings released by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), the initiating event was a loss of electrical power triggered by a loose signal wire connection inside the vessel’s main switchboard. Improper wire-label banding prevented the wire from being fully secured, leaving it vulnerable to disconnection.
When the connection loosened, breakers opened. Low-voltage power supporting propulsion control systems was lost. Steering and thrust control were removed at the worst possible moment — inside a confined channel with a fixed structure directly ahead.
This was not a failure of navigation.
It was a failure of electrical integrity.
The incident has intensified scrutiny on shipboard power redundancy, inspection practices within switchboards, emergency recovery procedures following blackouts, and the vulnerability of critical infrastructure located along major shipping lanes.
For mariners, the lesson is direct.
Serious consequences at sea do not always begin with extreme conditions.
Sometimes, they begin with a single overlooked detail.
And in restricted waters, recovery time is measured not in minutes — but in seconds.