- Cargo ship stuffed with EVs catches fire and sinks off coast of Alaska
A fire that started on a cargo ship nearly a month ago has come to a dramatic end, with the boat finally sinking off the coast of Alaska On June 3, the Morning Midas was making the journey from
- Morning Midas ship sinks in North Pacific weeks after catching fire | CNN
A cargo ship that had been delivering new vehicles to Mexico sank in the North Pacific Ocean, weeks after crew members abandoned ship when they couldn’t extinguish an onboard fire that left the
- Fire onboard cargo ship carrying 3000 cars 800 EVs led to evacuation . . .
A fire started June 3rd aboard the cargo ship Morning Midas, a vehicle carrier while it was traveling across the Pacific Ocean The fire originated on a deck carrying electric vehicles, prompting emergency firefighting efforts
- Cargo Ship That Caught Fire Carrying Electric Vehicles Sinks in the . . .
The Morning Midas sank 360 nautical miles from land after damage from both the fire and severe weather, according to a statement from Zodiac Maritime, the ship’s manager
- Why Was A Ship With 3,000 Cars Abandoned In The Pacific Ocean?
The Morning Midas, a cargo ship transporting 3,000 cars (including 800 EVs), was abandoned south of Adak, Alaska, when it caught fire in early June 2025
- Morning Midas sinks: Cargo ship sinks in Pacific weeks after fire
Ship caught on fire in early June The Liberian-flagged Morning Midas, which was headed to Lázaro Cárdenas, Mexico, from China, experienced a fire on June 3
- Car Carrier Sinks in Pacific After Blaze on Deck Carrying EVs
The Morning Midas car carrier sank in the Pacific Ocean late Monday, weeks after a fire started on a deck that was carrying electric vehicles The ship’s sinking leaves investigators with few
- When fire meets lithium: What the Morning Midas incident reveals about . . .
While the exact cause is still under investigation, Zodiac Maritime acknowledged that smoke originated from the EV deck The Morning Midas was carrying 65 fully electric vehicles and more than 680 hybrids, making this the most high-profile EV-related maritime fire since the Felicity Ace sank in 2022 🛟 A successful evacuation
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