Saturday, 12 November 2016

Super moon in Helsingborg

Tonight we had (almost) a total Super Moon!
The next time it happens is in 2034 ...





Late autumn pictures from Hittarp and Laröd

The dark season is here, bringing us some quite nice colours and contrasts. The pictures below I shot a couple of days ago here in Hittarp and neighbouring Laröd:














Sunday, 6 November 2016

A floating hotel passes by - The Ocean Gala in Öresund


The Ocean Gala - which once used to be the largest cruise ship in the world - today passed by on its way to Danish Esbjerg. The ship, which nowadays is used as a floating hotel, was supposed to accommodate refugees in Sweden. However, that did not happen, as the Swedish newspaper The Local reported in August:

"A luxury cruise ship which was planned to house asylum seekers in Sweden before the country's migration authority changed its mind has been put up for sale by its owner.
Floating Accommodations claims that a sale may be necessary to cover losses they would incur if the Swedish migration agency (Migrationsverket) fails to pay a 54 million kronor ($6.44 million) bill the company has sent to the agency for the costs of running the ship.
The US-based shipping magnate sent out two invoices totalling the mammoth fee earlier in August, despite Migrationsverket insisting that their agreement to house asylum seekers on the vessel has been null and void since July.
And the 40,000 tonne Ocean Gala is now up for sale for a price of around $20 million.
“We’ve put the Ocean Gala up for sale because it appears that Migrationsverket will try to get out of our agreement. As contractors we have an obligation to try to limit the damage,” Floating Accommodations spokesperson Kjell Tandberg told local newspaper Sundvalls Tidning.
“If someone buys or charters it our demand to Migrationsverket will reduce, and if not, we will continue to demand payment for the whole year as if we were in operation,” he added.
The attempted sale is the latest twist in a long-winded dispute between the ship’s owners and various Swedish entities, including the migration board and a local authority.
The affair started in February when Sweden signed a deal to lodge 1,800 asylum seekers aboard the ship, with its planned port of call Utansjö, in Härnösand on the Baltic Sea.
Härnösand municipality vetoed hosting the ship however. The Swedish migration board accepted that decision, before scrapping the deal with the firm entirely in July, arguing that the necessary requirements had not been met.
“Our deal was dependent on the procurement of all the necessary permits. This was not the case and the deal is therefore null and void,” Migrationsverket official Magnus Gustavsson said in a statement at the time.
Though Härnösand municipality banned the vessel from docking at Utansjö, the owners opted to lodge it there anyway. An appeal against that ban was subsequently thrown out by the Östersund regional Land and Environment Court at the start of August."