South Korea began to raise the hull of the sunken ferry Sewol late Wednesday after confirming all conditions were right to push the salvage operation forward, a government official said.
"We started to raise the hull of the Sewol at 8:50 p.m. and expect 13 meters of the 22-meter-wide ferry hull to be above the surface at around 11 a.m. Thursday," said Song Sang-geun, a spokesman for the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries.
The site of the Sewol ferry sinking off the country's southwestern coast near Jindo, some 472 kilometers south of Seoul (Yonhap)
If the lift is successful the salvage barges will move the hull onto a semisubmersible ship, which will carry it to the port of Mokpo, he explained.
"It will take about eight days to lift the ship and move it to the port. And it will require four additional days to move it onto a dry dock," the spokesman said.
Before committing to raising the ship, the ferry was carefully test lifted one meter from the sea bottom at 3:30 p.m. so experts could see if the vessel was ready to be raised, the ministry said.
The hull had been left at a depth of some 40 meters for nearly three years since it sank off the country's southwestern coast near Jindo Island in April 2014. The sinking, the country's worst maritime disaster, left more than 300 people dead, mostly high school students on a school excursion. Nine of them still remain missing.
The ministry said salvage workers carried out balancing procedures first before committing themselves to pulling the hull out of the water. It said all technical aspects and local weather conditions were reviewed. Divers also checked the underwater situation to make certain that the operation will go smoothly.
The complete lifting and transportation of the vessel to port is expected to be an arduous process and require good weather conditions, officials said. The hull itself should break the water's surface in the early hours of Thursday if there are no complications.
Efforts to lift the 145-meter-long, 6,825-ton ship began at 10:00 a.m. with two salvage barges and the semisubmersible ship.
It took several hours to decide whether to start lifting the ship because the sea must be fairly calm, meaning waves must be under 1 meter and wind speed needs to be below 10 meters per second.
Earlier, the Seoul government decided to pull the ferry out of the water intact in order to protect any remains of the people still missing from the tragic sinking.
The 85.1 billion won (US$72 million) project to recover the ship is being conducted by a Chinese consortium led by China's state-run Shanghai Salvage.
Divers have worked on making the ship buoyant by injecting air into tanks in the vessel and installing large balloons and other flotation devices.
Once the ship reaches Mokpo, authorities will try to find the remains of people still listed as missing and determine why the ship sank. (Yonhap)