09/10/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/10/2025 12:04
WASHINGTON (Sept. 10, 2025) - The National Transportation Safety Board issued a safety alert Wednesday urging greater awareness and training for land-based firefighters who may be called to fight fires aboard vessels in local ports.
The safety alert follows several NTSB investigations into deaths and injuries to firefighters. The NTSB found land-based firefighters often lack the necessary training and familiarity with vessel layouts and fire protection systems to effectively fight in-port vessel fires. They also may be unaware of how to use the structural fire protection built into most commercial vessels
NTSB recommends fire departments that serve ports improve the safety of their firefighters when responding to vessel fires by:
The safety alert cited three vessel fires the NTSB has investigated that resulted in land-based firefighters injured due to the firefighters' lack of training in vessel firefighting. Most recently, the NTSB investigated the 2023 fatal fire on the roll-on/roll-off container vessel Grande Costa D'Avorio in Newark, New Jersey. The Grande Costa D'Avorio was docked at Port Newark when a vehicle used by shoreside workers to push used vehicles onto the vessel caught fire on an interior garage deck. While attempting to put out the fire, two land-based firefighters were unable to find their way out of one of the smoke-filled garage decks and died. Newark Fire Division leadership directed the firefighters to actively engage the fire in the fire protection zone where the carbon dioxide gas extinguishing system had already been activated, which allowed more carbon dioxide out and more oxygen in, increasing the severity of the fire. The NTSB found the Newark Fire Division's lack of marine vessel firefighting training resulted in an ineffective response, led to the firefighter casualties, and contributed to the severity of the fire.
The safety alert is available online.
To report an incident/accident or if you are a public safety agency, please call 1-844-373-9922 or 202-314-6290 to speak to a Watch Officer at the NTSB Response Operations Center (ROC) in Washington, DC (24/7).