The recovery efforts following the 2012 Costa Concordia disaster were extensive, but they were not immediate. A total of 32 people lost their lives when the ship ran aground off the coast of Isola del Giglio, Italy. Initially, 30 bodies were recovered during the months following the wreck. However, two individuals—an Italian passenger named Maria Grazia Trecarichi and an Indian crew member named Russel Rebello—remained missing for a significant period. Maria Grazia Trecarichi's remains were identified in October 2013 after the ship was "parbuckled" (righted). The final victim, Russel Rebello, was not found until November 2014, more than two years after the incident, when his remains were discovered in a cabin during the ship's dismantling process in Genoa. By late 2014, it was confirmed that the remains of all 32 victims had been accounted for. The environmental cleanup and the complete dismantling of the vessel were finally concluded in 2017, marking the end of one of the most complex maritime salvage and recovery operations in history.