read magazine - InterTransIS
Transcription
read magazine - InterTransIS
DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 Number 193 *** COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS *** Saturday 12-07-2014 News reports received from readers and Internet News articles copied from various news sites. The VOS BASE in Den Helder – Photo : Piet Sinke – CLICK on the photo ! Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 1 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 Your feedback is important to me so please drop me an email if you have any photos or articles that may be of interest to the maritime interested people at sea and ashore PLEASE SEND ALL PHOTOS / ARTICLES TO : newsclippings@gmail.com If you don't like to receive this bulletin anymore : To unsubscribe click (English version) or visit the subscription page on our website. ://www.maasmondmaritime.com/uitschrijven.aspx?lan=en-US EVENTS, INCIDENTS & OPERATIONS The VESPERTINE outbound in Rotterdam-Caland canal – Photo : Dirk van Uitert © Asia Dry Bulk-Capesize rates to fall on lack of cargoes By Keith Wallis Rates for capesize bulk carriers on key Asian routes will continue to fall next week as the number of ships available for charter outpaces the volume of new cargoes, brokers said. There is a lack of activity. There are quite a few fixtures, but the market is not exactly busy," said a Singapore-based capesize broker. The broker estimated around 12 capesize ships had been chartered by Thursday, mainly to haul iron ore to China from Brazil and Australia. That is half the number that were chartered in the first three days of last week, Reuters freight data showed. The broker estimated there would be around 90 capesize vessels available for charter by the end of this week. There will be a gradual slide in rates. The market will continue to soften, although owners will resist lower rates where they can," the broker said. Freight rates from Australia to China would fall below $7.50 per tonne and could head towards $7 per tonne next week, the broker said. Charter rates from Brazil to China would drop towards $20 per tonne, he added. Rates for the Western Australia-China route closed at $7.76 per tonne on Wednesday, down from $8.26 a week earlier. But the last concluded fixture was lower at $7.64 per tonne, the cheapest rate since May 29. Freight rates for the Brazil-China Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 2 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 route <.BATB> closed at $21.55 per tonne on Wednesday, compared with $23.20 last Wednesday. The last fixture hit a three-week low of $21.19. The summer mood has reached the market with less cargoes and lower rates," Norwegian broker Fearnley said in a weekly note on Wednesday. "The state of our market can be explained by high iron ore inventories in China and inactive iron ore traders," Fearnley added. Iron ore stockpiles at Chinese ports topped 114.8 million tonnes in June, 57 percent higher than last year, the China Iron and Steel Association said in research published this week, even as iron ore imports fell. Rates in the Pacific for smaller panamax vessels are also set to slide as chartering activity eases, brokers said. The general consensus is the panamax market is softening. It shot up quite quickly last week, but I think it will come off a bit over the next week or 10 days," a Singapore-based panamax broker said on Thursday. Panamax charters in the Pacific were being fixed at $8,000 per day this week, about 25 percent higher than the Baltic index level, Fearnley said. Rates for a panamax transpacific voyage closed at a six-week high of $5,884 per day on Wednesday, compared with $3,566 per day last week. The last concluded fixture was slightly higher at $5,900 per day. Rates have rebounded since June 27 when they bottomed at $3,236 per day following a steady decline from $8,031 per day on May 20. Charter rates for supramax vessels were unchanged from last week at around $11,500 per day for a voyage from Singapore to India although there were signs of an improvement in rates, Fearnley said in its weekly note. The Baltic Exchange's main sea freight index closed at 863 points on Wednesday, down from 890 a week earlier. Technical analysis showed the index is expected to keep consolidating in a range of 847-995 in a week. Source : Reuters - (Reporting by Keith Wallis; Editing by Joseph Radford) Statoil gets nod for Barents Sea drilling The Norwegian government said it gave its consent to energy company Statoil to start drilling in controversial arctic waters of the Barents Sea. The Norwegian Petroleum Safety Authority said it gave Statoil consent to use Transocean's Spitsbergen drilling rig to explore an area in the Barents Sea just north of the country. "Drilling is planned to begin Sept. 1, with a duration of approximately 30 days, depending on whether a discovery is made," agency said in a statement Wednesday. More than a dozen Greenpeace demonstrators took part in a protest against Statoil's drilling plans for arctic waters by boarding the Transocean rig in May. Around half of them surrendered their campaign voluntarily and Statoil said the seven activists who remained behind were arrested by Norwegian police. The action from Greenpeace included a campaign against Russian energy company Gazprom. Six of the 30 campaigners involved in that protest were arrested by Norwegian police. The so-called Arctic 30, a group of Greenpeace activists, were arrested for similar actions against Gazprom last year. There was no statement from Statoil or Transocean on the drilling consent decision. Source : upi. Polish shipyard awarded $165-million BC Ferries contract Three new vessels will serve Sunshine Coast, Southern Gulf Islands Three new intermediate-class vessels will be built offshore by Remontowa Shipbuilding SA in Gdansk, Poland, for $165 million, BC Ferries announced Thursday. Ship contracts were expected to go offshore after North Vancouverbased Seaspan Marine pulled out of bidding early this year. Seaspan, which also owns Victoria Shipyards, was the only Canadian yard shortlisted for the work. Seaspan said it was too busy with upcoming federal contracts to bid for this contract. It is also building a $15-million cable ferry for BC Ferries. Even so, this contract is sparking renewed debate in B.C. over the decision to open bidding to international competitors. George MacPherson, president of the Shipyard General Workers' Federation, said Thursday that BC Ferries should have arranged for a consortium of B.C. yards to work together to build the ships, similar to what happened with the Spirit-class ferries. "It is extremely disappointing once again," he said. BC Ferries was criticized for building three Super-C-class ferries in Germany in 2008 for $542 million. It cited lower costs and price guarantees as one of the reasons for going to Germany. MacPherson said the workers are available and yards are not that busy. The contract will "feed the economy" of another country, he said from Vancouver. These three 105-metre-long ships will be the first in the BC Ferries fleet to run either on liquefied natural gas or diesel fuel. The first ship is to be delivered to Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 3 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 B.C. in August 2016, the second in October 2016, and the third in February 2017, a BC Ferries release said. Remontowa is responsible for getting the ships to Victoria.Two of the ships will replace the 49-year-old Queen of Burnaby, which runs between Comox and Powell River, and the 50-year-old Queen of Nanaimo, servicing the Southern Gulf Islands-Tsawwassen route. Vessel No. 3 will be used in peak and shoulder seasons on the Southern Gulf Islands run and serve as a relief vessel throughout the fleet. The QUEEN OF NANAIMO entering active pass in the Gulf islands BC- Photo Robert Etchell © Each ferry will hold up to 145 vehicles and 600 passengers. The total project budget is $252 million. That figure includes financing and project management costs, and $51 million for Canadian taxes and federal import duties, the release said. "These are design-build, fixed-price contracts that provide BC Ferries with substantial guarantees related to delivery dates, performance criteria, cost certainty and quality construction," Mark Wilson, the company's vicepresident of engineering, said in a statement. The company carried out an "extensive competitive bidding process to ensure that the company secured the best bid for its customers and the taxpayers of British Columbia," the release said. Remontowa Shipbuilding is one of the world's leading shipyards with state-of-the-art design and production facilities, the statement said. The shipyard was established in 1952 and privatized in 2001. The other shortlisted yards were in Turkey, Norway and Germany. Source : The Vancouver Sun © Navy hands over alleged sea pirates to police After spending 100 days in the naval cell, arrested suspected sea pirates, Ovakpor Osagada and two others, have been handed over to the Nigerian Police for prosecution. The handing over took place on Thursday at the Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) Warri, Delta State, in the presence of journalists. Osagada, including the captain of the vessel, Takoradi Doghor and the chief engineer, William Asegieme, were arrested by men of the Warri naval base on April 1, while their vessel, MV Gare, was berthing in Warri ports. Nigerian Tribune had earlier reported that Osadaga had, through his Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 4 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 counsel, Oghenejabor Ikimi, approached Otor-Udu High Court to challenge his illegal detention and denial of access to his family for 90 days without trial. Presiding judge of the court, Justice (Mrs) F.N. Azinge, gave an order for their release on Wednesday after hearing a fundamental rights application filed on behalf of the applicant by Mr Oghenejabor Ikimi in suit number OUHC/110/14 Mr Ovakpor Osagada vs Nay Captain Musa Gemu and two others. The court order was later served to the commander of NNS Delta, Captain Gemu, on Wednesday after which the three suspects were handed over to the Interpol for further investigation. Speaking at the handing over parade at the Warri Naval Base, Captain Gemu said the suspects were arrested with a gigantic vessel after a tip-off that they were engaged in oil bunkering. He said the trio and the vessel were apprehended at about 200 nautical miles off the Angola territorial waters sometime in March. According to Captain Gemu, MV Gare, which was capable of carrying 1,000 tonnes, had no content in it during the arrest. Captain Gemu, who did not inform journalists that he was served a court order before the hand over, handed the suspects and vessel to a team of International Police (Interpol) led by one Mr. Soji Idowu, a insisting that MV Gare had been involved in hijacking petroleum products. Meanwhile, one of the suspects, Mr Osagada, has said he and his crew members were suppliers of foodstuffs at the high sea. Osagada, who is a deckhand employee of Bentech Nigeria Ltd, a marine company domiciled at Enerhen Road, Effurun, near Warri, had through Ikimi, disclosed no fewer than 11 naval personnel were usually hired by the owner of the ship as escorts while embarking on voyage. Meanwhile, human rights lawyer and counsel to Mr Osagada, Mr Ikimi, has bemoaned illegal detention of suspects without trial in various cell of security agents in the country, calling for a change. “After serving the court order on the Navy by the bailiff of the court, Osagada and other crew members of MV Gare, we’re finally handed over to the police 100 days after being held in the custody of the navy. What a country!,” Ikimi stated. Source : Nigerian Tribune The MERI navigating the Oude Maas - Photo : Willem Holtkamp © Top shippers Maersk, MSC attempt new sharing agreement By Ole Mikkelsen The world's top two container shippers, Maersk Line and MSC Mediterranean Shipping Co, have struck a fresh vesselsharing agreement after a previous three-way pooling deal known as P3 was undone by China's failure to approve it. Maersk and MSC say sharing vessels cuts costs, fuel usage and emissions. But critics, including those sending cargo, fear the shippers could dominate key trade routes carrying consumer goods around the world. Analysts said the shippers had a better a chance of gaining Chinese approval with the latest deal because it involves fewer ships and volumes of goods and is structured differently. In statements issued on Thursday, MSC and A.P. Moller-Maersk, the parent company of Maersk Line, said 185 vessels would be shared, including 20 of Maersk's giant Triple-E ships, with an estimated capacity of 2.1 million 20-foot equivalent units (TEU). They will run the trans-Atlantic, trans-Pacific and Asia-Europe routes, critical paths in the global trade of goods. Last year's deal - between Maersk, MSC and France's CMA CGM - aimed to share about 250 vessels and would have had more than 40 percent of Asia-Europe and trans-Atlantic trade and 24 percent of the trans-Pacific market, Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 5 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 according to industry estimates. It was rejected by Chinese regulators who said they did not believe consumers' interests would be sufficiently protected against the domination of the three shippers. The EDITH MEARSK arriving in Rotterdam-Europoort – Photo: Cees van der Kooij © The combined capacity share under this deal would be below 30 percent in routes between Asia and Europe, Maersk Line CEO Soren Skou told Reuters. "This one is only a vessel sharing agreement. The P3 plan included an operating company which was the main reason why Chinese regulators looked at it as a merger," Skou told Reuters. He said the Chinese Ministry of Transport would look at the deal this time: P3 had been investigated by the Commerce Ministry. Calls to both ministries were not answered. The MSC FLORENTINA outbound from Felixstowe Photo : Andrew Moors Harwich lifeboat © CHINESE RIVALS Maersk's share price jumped 2 percent at the start of trading on the Copenhagen stock exchange. By 13:50 a.m. CET (1150 GMT) shares were up 0.22 percent at 13,450 Danish crowns compared to a 1.1 percent loss in the main Copenhagen index. Swiss-based MSC is not listed. "They are obviously less ambitious with this deal," said Credit Suisse analyst Neil Glynn. "I would be surprised if Maersk Line didn't have a very strong idea of what regulators would and wouldn't approve based on their P3 experience." Lars Jensen from Copenhagen-based maritime analysis company SeaIntel said by dropping CMA CGM, Maersk and MSC should placate any Chinese fears for its own shipping container industry. A vessel sharing agreement between CMA CGM, United Arab Shipping Company and China Shipping Container Lines is already in place on the world's busiest freight route from Asia to Europe. That agreement was expected to fall apart if the P3 alliance went ahead, Jensen said. "By not having CMA CGM in this new vessel sharing agreement, the existing agreement between CMA CGM, United Arab Shipping Company and China Shipping Container Lines can continue. As a consequence, pressure on Chinese container shipping companies is not as big as if P3 was approved," he said. CMA CGM declined to comment Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 6 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 while reaction from the Chinese shipping industry was mixed. Cai Jiangxiang, vice-chairman of the China Shippers' Association which had lobbied the government to block the P3 alliance, drew a distinction between the capacity share and actual market share, which he said may end up being higher. "We need international shipping regulators to investigate whether their market share will be above 30 percent," he said. "If they're able to utilize their capacity really well, they could grab a higher market share, even like 60 percent." But John Lu, a former chairman of the Asian Shippers' Council, said the fact that there will be no commercial links between Maersk and MSC should ease fears of any potential of their collusion on freight rates. "So long as the (agreement) is accepted by the market it will be good news because it will provide better services," with more sailings and services to more ports, Lu said. Source : Reuters (Additional reporting by Shida Chayesteh in Copenhagen, Keith Wallis in Singapore, Brenda Goh in Shanghai and Gus Trompiz in Paris; Writing by Sabina Zawadzki; Editing by Sophie Walker) The SVITZER LONDON passing the SD SPARTA in Rotterdam-Beercanal – Photo : Cees van der Kooij © Vietnamese ships maintain law enforcement duties at rig site Chinese marine surveillance aircraft CMS-B3808 on July 10 was seen to flight above Vietnamese law enforcement ships that are operating in the national waters, close to where drilling rig Haiyang Shiyou-981 is illegally standing, reported the Vietnam Fisheries Surveillance Department. At 11:45, 12:40 and 13:05, the CMS-B3808 circled above the Vietnamese ships at the height of 200-300m before leaving, it said. At the same time, more than 100 Chinese ships of all kinds, including five battleships, continued surrounding the drilling rig, which was positioned in Vietnam ’s exclusive economic zone and continental shelf in early May. The Chinese ships formed lines around the rig and aggressively prevented Vietnamese ships from approaching the rig to conduct communications missions to demand China immediately remove the facility from Vietnam’s waters. Despite Chinese harassment, Vietnam’s coast guard and fisheries surveillance ships managed to operate in the area to perform their duties about 10-11 nautical miles from the rig. Meanwhile, Vietnamese fishing vessels, facing the violent disturbance of Chinese fishing ships and two coast guard vessels, still maintained their normal activities in their traditional ground about 42 nautical miles from the rig. At the beginning of May 2014, China illegally dispatched the rig Haiyang Shiyou-981 as well as a large fleet of armed vessels, military ships and aircraft to Vietnam’s waters and positioned the rig at 15 degrees 29 minutes 58 seconds Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 7 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 north latitude and 111 degrees 12 minutes 06 seconds east longitude. The location is 80 miles deep into Vietnam ’s continental shelf and exclusive economic zone. Despite Vietnam ’s protest, China expanded its scale of operation and moved the rig to 15 degrees 33 minutes 36 seconds north latitude and 111 degrees 34 minutes 11 seconds east longitude, 60 nautical miles deep inside Vietnam ’s continental shelf and exclusive economic zone. On May 26, Chinese ship 11209 sank a Vietnamese fishing vessel that was operating normally in its traditional fishing ground near Vietnam’s Hoang Sa (Paracel) archipelago. Source : VietnamNet Tractor helps lifeboat plough the waves A converted farm tractor is set to help save lives…at sea. With massive tyres, 85 per cent filled with water, there is no way it will float – but it can tow Lyme Regis lifeboat across the beach so it can quickly reach sailors in distress. Weighing six-and-a-half tonnes, the shiny new converted farm tractor will be used to push the lifeboat out to sea at low tide and pull it back ashore and into the boathouse after a ‘shout’ or exercise. The new machine replaced the old Ford County tractor which had been based in Lyme Regis for 12 years. Volunteer tractor mechanic Mark Gage said: ”We are delighted with the new tractor. Normally a tractor is taken away for refurbishment after ten years, but because the crew in Lyme Regis really looked after the old 1974 machine we kept it longer.” The new former agricultural tractor has a special metal case fitted over its body so that it can be taken out in deep water with the driver protected. Source : midweek herald Megaschip wordt afgebouwd in Rotterdam Het grootste schip ter wereld, dat in Zuid-Korea is gebouwd, wordt in de Rotterdamse haven afgemonteerd. Eigenaar en ontwerper Allseas van de PIETER SCHELTE en het Havenbedrijf Rotterdam hebben daartoe een overeenkomst gesloten, maakte het Havenbedrijf vrijdag bekend. Het is de bedoeling dat het schip eind dit jaar in Nederland arriveert. Het megaschip is met 382 meter niet het langste ter wereld, maar dat wordt volgens een woordvoerder gecompenseerd door de enorme breedte van het vaartuig: 124 meter. Het schip heeft een dubbele boeg en is speciaal ontworpen voor het installeren en weghalen van grote olie- en gasplatforms op zee. Allseas, een groot toeleverancier aan de olie- en gasmarkt, rust het schip ook uit voor het leggen van grote pijpleidingen. Het afmonteren van de Pieter Schelte vindt plaats op het binnenmeer van de Tweede Maasvlakte. Speciaal voor het schip wordt daar een put gebaggerd. In de Rotterdamse haven zullen de 65 meter lange balken van het hefsysteem worden geïnstalleerd. De hijsbalken worden in Italië gebouwd en komen per schip naar Nederland. Allard Castelein, topman van het Havenbedrijf Rotterdam, noemt de komst van de PIETER SCHELTE een geweldige stimulans voor de maritieme industrie. De werkzaamheden zorgen naar verwachting voor veel extra omzet voor het bedrijfsleven in de regio. Source : nu.nl Joint venture with CMA CGM affirms Adani plan to grow Mundra as a container hub For port operators, tie-ups with container lines give assured business that would otherwise take up years to grow P.Manoj 0 inShare 0 Comments Subscribe to: Daily Newsletter Breaking News World Cup News How Argentina and Germany have fared at World Cup finals World Cup: Sergio Aguero warns Argentina about past mistakes against Germany Germany’s Miroslav Klose, Thomas Mueller revel in World Cup glory World Cup 2014: Neymar cheers for Argentina and Lionel Messi World Cup 2014: Louis van Gaal rues missing shootout specialist Krul against Argentina Latest News 05:56 PM IST Industrial output grows 4.7% in May 05:45 PM IST Govt plans to set up asset reconstruction firms for power, road sectors 05:43 PM IST Germany says expulsion of US spy chief was inevitable 05:36 PM IST EYE SPY: Who was Jane Austen? 05:27 PM IST Coal India starts new major mine in at least 5 years Editor's picks Union Budget 2014 seeks to reboot India Some doors which were closed, we have opened: Arun Jaitley Budget 2014 aims to facilitate surge in investment A corporate, social and responsible budget At a water depth of 16.5 Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 8 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 metres, Mundra port can berth ultra large container ships with a capacity to carry 18,000 TEUs. Photo: Mint Last week, when Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone Ltd (APSEZ), India’s biggest private port operator, announced an equal joint venture with French container line CMA CGM SA for a new container terminal—the fourth—at Mundra port in Gujarat, it shed more light on APSEZ’s strategy to boost container business at its flagship port, now India’s largest. It is global practice for container carriers to invest in developing terminals exclusively for their use. There are many advantages in doing this. It gives the container line priority berthing over other carriers and helps it negotiate better rates for calling at the terminal. As a result, the carrier that has invested in the terminal need not have to wait for a berth to dock on arrival, thus avoiding waiting charges. And, competitive rates lower the cost of calling at such facilities. The lower vessel-related charges reduce the cost of operations for lines, given the fact that marine charges in India are one of the highest in the world. It’s no wonder then that container carriers, particularly the world’s top three, have their own terminal operating units. Maersk Line Ltd, the world’s biggest container line, has APM Terminals Management BV. Mediterranean Shipping Co. SA (MSC), the second largest container carrier, has Terminal Investment Ltd SA, while CMA-CGM, the third biggest, owns CMA Terminals SA. For port operators such as APSEZ, tie-ups with container lines, their main customers, give assured business that would otherwise take up years to grow. At no stage does APSEZ have to go looking for business. There is no need, virtually, for sales and marketing of the terminal. It’s a win-win for both the parties. The new investment, the first by the French company in an Indian port, adds to the 27 container terminals that CMA CGM Group has in its portfolio, and is a key step in its strategy to further expand its position in port operations, the firm said in a statement. Last year, APSEZ entered into a similar joint venture with MSC for its third container terminal at Mundra which has started operations with an initial capacity of 1.5 million twenty-foot equivalent units, or TEUs, a year. A TEU is the standard size of a container and a common measure of capacity in the container business. The capacity of the terminal would be expanded to handle up to 5 million standard containers a year as demand grows. The terminal being developed jointly with CMA CGM will have a capacity to load 1.3 million TEUs a year. Terminal Investment has controlling or jointly-controlling interests in 31 container terminals globally, serving most of the world’s major trade routes and located in North and South America, Europe, Africa, the Middle East and Asia. Terminal Investment was set up to secure berths and terminal capacity in the major ports used by MSC. Both, MSC and CMA CGM are the biggest customers of Mundra port. So it makes sense to develop separate terminals for their own use. For the record, though, APSEZ says that the joint venture terminals are common user facilities which can be accessed by all carriers; but it is evident that carriers will get priority berthing by virtue of being investors in the terminals. It is also clear that investors are being lured by the water depth at Mundra, along with world-class infrastructure facilities such as rail and road connectivity and the vast north and north-western hinterland (cargo generating region). The rail link to Mundra port can carry two containers, one on top of the other (called double stack) at a time, on each flat wagon. At a water depth of 16.5 metres, Mundra can berth ultra large container ships with a capacity to carry 18,000 TEUs. Container carriers are investing in such big ships to achieve economies of scale as they help carry larger numbers of containers at a time, leading to cost savings. Mundra has huge tracts of back-up land that can be utilized for port-related activities, a large water-front and infrastructure that can be expanded quickly to grow volumes. To top it, Mundra is free to set its own rates, unlike ports that are owned by the Indian government. MSC has already started operating its Mundra facility as a trans-shipment hub into which smaller feeder vessels bring containers which then get loaded onto larger ships and are transported to their final destinations. After becoming India’s biggest port and the first to cross the 100 million tonnes cargo-handling mark in a year (during 2013-14), APSEZ has set its sights on becoming the biggest container port, too, as Gautam Adani, the billionaire chairman of Ahmedabad, Gujarat-based Adani Group that runs APSEZ, said after announcing the joint venture with CMA CGM. The new terminal will help APSEZ ramp up container loading capacity at Mundra port to 5.5 million TEUs a year. In comparison, state-owned Jawaharlal Nehru port near Mumbai, India’s busiest container gateway, loads 4.16 million TEUs a year and has been struggling for many years to add capacity. Source : livemint Cruise lines are courting agents again. Will the romance last? Last week saw three cruise lines announce plans to boost commission. Sophie Griffiths looks at why lines are coming back to the trade, and asks agents whether they are convinced “We want to serve you,” MSC Cruises proudly declared to the trade last week. It was the strapline of its new agent initiative, which will see the line doubling its trade sales force, and increasing commission on both its shore excursions and the overall sale of its cruise packages. Just days before MSC’s announcement, P&O and Cunard, the former employers of MSC executive director for the UK, Ireland and Australia Giles Hawke, announced they too would be offering agents a commission boost, with a bonus of up to 6% on top of the standard 7.5% remuneration levels for Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 9 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 sales of P&O’s Select Price and Cunard Fare tickets. The past 12 months have seen a flurry of headlines and press releases as cruise lines competed over who could shout loudest about their commitment to the trade. In March 2013, Princess revealed it was upping its commission to 10% on the cruise elements of bookings. In the summer P&O and Cunard followed by announcing their Agent Matters campaign, before upping their commission from 5% to 7.5% in December. Princess followed by revealing it would be paying 10% commission on flights booked on 2015 cruises. HAL’s VEENDAM moored in Sydney – Nova Scotia – Photo : Jan-Willem Slofstra, 2nd Officer M.S. Veendam © Cruise chiefs continued to stress their commitment to agents in interviews with TTG. And in May even Clia UK and Ireland announced that it would be setting up a new travel agent advisory council to discuss how the association, which comprises all the major cruise lines, can best help the trade in the future. It is a notable turnaround from the days of 2011, when Hawke - now the man spearheading MSC’s agent-focused campaign - announced that P&O, Cunard and Princess Cruises would be slashing their commission to 5% and agents were left to watch as other lines, including Royal Caribbean, Celebrity Cruises and Norwegian Cruise Line, slowly followed suit. While the cruise bosses still stressed the importance of the trade, the commission cuts told a different story, and the letters pages of TTG were filled with angry comments from agents vowing to derack cruise brochures and accusing the lines of moving into the direct-sell market. As before, actions are speaking louder than words, and as commission levels slowly begin to climb, so the promises from cruise bosses that agents remain integral to their sales becomes more believable. But are agents convinced, and are the lines doing enough to encourage those who moved away from selling cruise in 2011 to now return to this once lucrative sector? For Alan Bevan, owner of Cardiff-based Blue Skies Travel, who deracked P&O and Cunard brochures in 2011, the answer seems to be yes - albeit a grudging one. “It’s clear that more and more people are booking with travel agents rather than online - the route to market is reversing back to agents rather than online,” he says. “We did stop selling P&O, Cunard and Princess cruises when they cut commission - we deracked the brochures, but we’ve started racking them again in the past few months after they raised the commission.” Gary Wardrope, owner of Get Cruising in Tunbridge Wells, agrees that the lines are making positive moves, but believes agents will be reluctant to trust cruise companies for a long while yet. “The commission cuts left a sour taste in people’s mouth. ”It’s always good to see commission increased, but what is currently being offered by P&O and Cunard is a short-term bonus” John Sullivan, Advantage : “I moved into different [travel] businesses away from cruising because I didn’t want to be exposed again [after the commission cuts]. Just because they put commission up for a few months doesn’t mean we can trust them - I would want to see more evidence that this was a longer-term commitment,” he adds. Emma Sanger, personal travel advisor at Wexas, is also sceptical. “They’re trying to woo the agents, but it just feels like some of the lines are clutching at straws,” she says. “It’s a drop in the ocean - they’re making positive signs, but it won’t make much difference to agents, we need to see evidence of a real commitment.” Advantage’s head of commercial, John Sullivan, concedes he also has concerns about the longevity of the cruise line’s commitment to the trade. “It’s always good to see commission increased, but what is currently being offered by P&O and Cunard is a short-term bonus. One of the challenges is that a travel agent could sell a lot of customers into P&O and those passengers will then return, but the commission will have gone back down again - the agent will have spent all that time introducing a customer to P&O, but will only be rewarded in the short-term. It’s not a long-term strategy.” Chris Truscott, sales and distribution support director for P&O and Cunard, disagrees however. He is keen to stress that the Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 10 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 latest offer of bonus commission might itself be a short-lived promotion, but it is all part of a wider year-long campaign which he insists not only demonstrates his commitment to agents, but also the campaign’s longevity. “Travel agents aren’t just in focus now - we have always been focused on them - they have always been our biggest channel of sale,” he argues. “All the things that we have introduced have been part of our Agent Matters campaign, which we launched last summer. This [bonus] is just another continuance of that ongoing theme; it’s part of our sustained support plans for agents. We are absolutely committed to the trade.” Staying loyal Hawke is equally adamant that agents never stopped being important to the cruise lines. “I’m not sure the cruise lines ever went away from agents,” he insists. “They just tried to make the discounting work out better and be more efficient. One of the interesting things in the commission cuts was that it did change the model and did change discounting,” he adds. As commission levels rise, agents do concede there is a concern that those less scrupulous in the trade could use their increased earning to slash prices. Sanger says she would like to see lines “coming down hard” on those that do, however Truscott and Hawke say they would rather use more gentle tactics. ”I’m not sure the cruise lines ever went away from agents. They tried to make the discounting work out better and be more efficient” Giles Hawke, MSC : “The previous approach was really confusing for customers,” says Truscott. “Travel agents asked for the opportunity to retain more margins and earn more, and I’ve responded by giving them that opportunity now it’s over to them, they need to do what is right for their business.” Hawke adds: “I would hope that agents would use the extra money to invest in their business and their marketing as opposed to going out with the lowest price.” Agents, meanwhile, are also critical about how much they are actually able to make on their cruise sales, with complaints that the non-commissionable elements of the cruise package remain so large, the commission that they end up earning is often insignificant compared with the amount of time put into selling a cruise. “It’s a real issue,” says Sullivan. Sanger agrees: “I think 7.5% is not enough when non-commissionable elements are taken into account, and this should be addressed,” she adds. “If the cruise lines want to restore our faith in them, they’ve still got their work cut out.” Truscott insists it is an issue he is aware of, and says the decision in December to introduce commission on flights within P&O and Cunard’s fly-Med programme for this summer was made in response to feedback from agents. “There are more commissionable elements in our cruise packages than we ever had previously,” he adds. The passion of Truscott and other cruise line bosses is evident, and agents do appear to be encouraged, if a little reluctantly. What is clear, however, is that the cruise lines will need to continue to ensure that their actions speak as loud as their words do. As Wardrope cautions: “I like what the cruise lines are doing, but things don’t change overnight. “The cruise lines alienated the travel agents; now they are trying to resuscitate them. Agents have shown them who the boss is - we are still the masters.” Source : TTG-Digital Pacific Aria and Pacific Eden to join P&O Cruises fleet P&O Cruises Australia has just revealed the names of the two new ships which will boost its local fleet to a record five year-round vessels from November next year. Joining P&O from sister brand Holland America, the names of the additional vessels, Pacific Aria and Pacific Eden, were unveiled on Sydney's Bondi Beach as part of a giant sand Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 11 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 mural. The winning names are the result of a Facebook quest which saw more than 30,000 suggestions received from the Australian and New Zealand public. Source : cruiseweekly 11-07-2014: FUSION , flagged in St Vincent - Grenadines basks in the early morning sunlight as she heads into Halifax Harbour. Photo: René Serrao, Portuguese Cove, NS.(c) Maersk Tankers continues exit from crude transportation Maersk Tankers, a unit of A.P. Moller-Maersk, said it had quit four unprofitable crude oil charter contracts by buying out supertankers and selling them onwards, continuing its exit from crude oil transportation. The company now has charters for just two supertankers, called Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs), although the intention is to get out of these contracts too, Maersk Tankers spokeswoman Stine Pedersen said. Buying the vessels from their owners allows Maersk to exit the charter contracts. The spokeswoman said Maersk had decided two years ago to cease transporting crude oil and focus instead of carrying refined products such as gasoline and diesel, and that Thursday’s announcement was in line with that strategy. “This transaction will contribute a good upside to our bottom line in 2014,” Maersk Tankers Chief Executive Morten Engelstoft said in a statement. The four VLCCs have been sold to Belgium’s Euronav . Three vessels will be delivered this year with the last coming in the second quarter of 2015, Maersk said. The VLCCs are Japanese-built and on average three years old. Maersk Tankers sold 15 VLCCs in January. Source: Reuters (Reporting by Shida Chayesteh and Sabina Zawadzki; editing by Tom Pfeiffer and Pravin Char) Apache seeks buyer for Wheatstone LNG stake HOUSTON -- Apache Corp., the energy company that has announced $9.8 billion of asset sales in the past year, is seeking a buyer for its interests in the Wheatstone LNG project, people familiar with the matter said. The oil and gas Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 12 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 producer is in early discussions with potential buyers for its holdings in Chevron's A$29 billion ($27 billion) project in Western Australia, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the matter is private. Macquarie Group and Goldman Sachs Group are advising Houston-based Apache on the sale, they said. In the past year, Apache has sold its Argentinian operations, deepwater assets in the Gulf of Mexico and a stake in its Egypt business as it seeks to reduce net debt, which stood at $8 billion at the end of March, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Its 13% stake in the Wheatstone project could be valued at about $2.5 billion, according to UBS. “A number of companies across the industry are starting to pull back from some projects they previously had been pursuing with a fair bit of vigor,” John Young, a Melbourne-based analyst at Ord Minnett, said by phone. “They could perceive they have more attractive opportunities in the U.S.” A sale of the Wheatstone stake would reduce Apache’s capital spending commitments by $1.4 billion this year and $800 million in 2015, UBS analysts led by William Featherston wrote in a report. Proceeds could be used to fund further share buybacks, according to the report. Cost Overruns The Wheatstone plant will produce 8.9 million tpy of LNG and is due to start in 2016, according to its website. Apache also holds a 65% interest in the Julimar and Brunello offshore fields, which it operates and which will provide gas to the Wheatstone facility. Wheatstone is among seven LNG export developments being built in Australia at a cost of about $190 billion to meet Asian demand. High construction costs and a strong Australian dollar have hurt project developers including BG Group, with the bill for Chevron’s Gorgon LNG project surging to $54 billion from an estimate of $37 billion in 2009. Chevron owns 64% of the Wheatstone project, according to its Australian unit’s website. Kuwait Foreign Petroleum Exploration Co., known as Kufpec, holds 13% while a group of Japanese companies including Tokyo Electric Power Co., known as Tepco, jointly hold an 8% interest. Chinese energy companies may be interested in buying Apache’s Wheatstone holdings, Nik Burns, a Melbourne-based analyst at UBS, said today by phone. Kufpec may also consider buying the stake, he said. Royal Dutch Shell agreed in January to sell its 6.4% stake in the Wheatstone project and an 8% stake in the Wheatstone-Iago gas fields for $1.14 billion to Kufpec. The Wheatstone facility will supply fuel to customers in Asia such as Tepco, Chubu Electric Power Co. and Tohoku Electric Power Co. David Parker, a Perth-based spokesman for Apache, referred to comments CEO Steven Farris made in a May 28 presentation. Farris said at the time Apache was “trying to monetize” Wheatstone, according to a transcript. Parker declined to comment further. Spokeswomen for Macquarie and Goldman Sachs declined to comment. Source : hydrocarbonprocessing Dry bulk carriers’ prices on correction mode as freight market is slow to rebound The prices for dry bulk vessels, both secondhand and newbuilding is trending lower. In its recent weekly report, shipbroker Intermodal noted that the “mini-boom in dry bulker values catapulted ship prices too fast too far over the last one-and-a-half year. The concurrence of historically low prices in both second-hand and newbuilding markets, which approached the post Asian crisis lows in inflation-adjusted terms, offered the perfect background for asset play, but this is much easier said than done”. According to SnP broker, Mr. Panos Tsilingiris, “most real-world buy-low-sellhigher cases concentrated on the flipping of newbuildings contracted at rock-bottom prices when we witnessed Handysize Newbuildings at sub-20musd levels, Ultramaxes at sub-24musd, Kamsarmaxes at rgn 26musd, and Capes at low-mid 40s. Notably, Cargill penned in May 2013 3x180kdwt Capes at SWS, acknowledging they would not operate these ships forever, and by the end of the same year sold them to Scorpio at 57musd each at a stunning rgn10musd profit per vessel. Oldendorff purchased a Crown-63 resale in late 2012 for mid-24s and after trading her, sold her for rgn31musd to Greeks. The same interests recently sold to Diana, a 180k Capesize resale under construction at Qingdao Beihai, for 58musd and a profit in excess of 10musd”, he noted. Meanwhile, “S&P-wise, the appreciation was spectacular on all dry asset classes last year. Regarding LME Panamaxes, ex-Ocean Planet (‘05 Sasebo) was committed in January 2013 by Chartworld at sub-m$15 while ex-Ocean Lily (’06 Imabari) was sold to Sanko close to 25musd this March, resulting in a 2/3 value appreciation in 14mos. While initial appreciation was substantiated, it went on irrationally (mimicry, artificial liquidity by the speculative funds, fear of ‘losing’ the market or even having money in the bank, taxation considerations, low interest rates, etc). On a few S&P asset play cases, in late 2012 Norwegian interests committed the 2006-built Tsuneishi Kamsarmax ex ‘Mizunagi Maru’ arnd 18.4musd and sold her a year later at 23.5musd to Greek interests enjoying a 5musd profit. Chinese owners also got on the bandwagon, having sold two late 90s Capes (m/v Lian Fu Star and m/v Tai Fu Star) to Ukrainians at mid/high teens recording a profit of rgn/xs 5musd per vessel in less than a year”, Tsilingiris said. He added that “the current price correction is evidenced by the sale of the ‘Yusho Spica’ at rgn 20musd marked an abrupt 5musd discount from her same-year built sister ‘Ocean Lily’ 3 months ago. This brings asset values back to May 2013 when the ex-Shoyo (76k ’06 Namura) was sold at 20.25musd to Diana. Most likely, the current correction will not break soon the previous lows, because the costs of creating a new Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 13 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 asset, ie, newbuilding prices, are well above previous lows and there are still many buyers/funds getting ready to step in, should a further correction in asset values occurs”. According to the broker, “well-timed acquisitions materialize when the others are fearful, when the banks do not lend money, when speculative money becomes disappointed. Nobody knows where we are heading but the recent past has benchmarked a lower bound for assets. As such, there may be longer-term value in modern S&P deals priced up to a 20% premium above the rock-bottom (e.g. a 2006/7 Japanese built Panamax BC at 18musd) and at a respective 10% premium for newbuildings (e.g., rgn/sub 29-30musd for Kamsa NBs from top Chinese yards). We may be getting close to there, but there are strong resistance forces as well. Perhaps the wildest scenario would arise if the freight market stays depressed for another year and asset prices deteriorate further. What would then be the reaction of the speculative funds that, having a short-term investment horizon anyway, may massively look for an exit? In case this happens, it may signal the biggest asset play opportunity in the coming years”, Tsilingiris concluded. Source : Nikos Roussanoglou, Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide Port Authority of Singapore leads multi-agency team for emergency preparedness exercise at sea The Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) held a full-day emergency preparedness exercise, codenamed "Exercise Blue Dolphin 2014" where evacuation of some 700 passengers and crew members onboard a passenger vessel was carried out. The exercise was carried out to test the readiness of various agencies to respond to passenger vessel incidents in the Port of Singapore, the company said in its press release. More than 1000 personnel from 21 agencies and companies participated in this exercise, which consisted of a table-top drill at the Port Operations Control Centre at PSA Vista and deployment of resources to test the preparedness and response of mass evacuation and transfer of persons at the sea. The exercise will be conducted in the Eastern Holding Anchorage, approximately 4.5 km from Marina South Pier and at the landward locations in Marina South Pier and the Marina Bay Cruise Centre Singapore. The Exercise scenario started with a fire in the engine room of a cruise ship heading towards Singapore. To ensure the safety of passengers and crew and to obtain additional support to put out the fire, the Master reported the incident to MPA's Port Operations Control Centre and requested for assistance in firefighting and evacuating the passengers. The evacuated passengers and crew will be brought to the landing point at Marina South Pier where the injured will receive medical attention and the Marina Bay Cruise Centre Singapore for temporary refuge. MPA's Chief Executive, Mr Andrew Tan said," As a major hub port along a very busy waterway, Singapore takes the safety of vessels and passengers seriously. The exercise today gives us an excellent opportunity to test our inter-agency response to any major emergencies at sea involving real assets and people. We cannot take safety for granted and it involves everyone playing their part." Source : portNews Concordia to refloat on 14 July Costa Cruises’ Costa Concordia is to be refloated on Monday 14 July, pending final confirmation from the Italian authorities. Over the past few days the Titan-Micoperi salvage team has tested the refloating systems, which were completed last week after the final sponson was installed on Concordia’s port side. Following authorisation from the Italian Monitoring Observatory and confirmation of appropriate weather conditions on 13 july, technicians will use a pneumatic system to gradually empty all 30 sponsons of ballast water, providing the necessary buoyancy to refloat the wreck. At the end of this operation the ship will have a draft of around 18.5 m. Last week, Costa revealed that Titan-Micoperi will tow Concordia from Giglio Island to the San Giorgio del Porto shipyard in Genoa. The ship will then be dismantled and recycled during a four-phase, 22-month project. Source : Cruiseandferry Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 14 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 MacGregor wins Pusnes offloading system order from Bumi Armada MacGregor, part of Cargotec has won an order from Bumi Armada Berhad, a Malaysia-based international offshore oilfied services provider, to supply a Pusnes offloading system for a floating production storage and offloading (FPSO) conversion project. The Pusnes offloading system will be delivered by March 2015. The order is booked into the second quarter 2014 order intake, the company said in its press release. "By having Pusnes products in MacGregor's portfolio, we are able to offer complete mooring and loading systems for floating production units," says Francis Wong, Vice President, Segment Sales, Offshore. Bumi Armada are using a recently built ice-class tanker for the FPSO conversion, which will take place at Keppel Shipyard Ltd in Singapore. Once completed, FPSO Armada Kraken will have a total storage capacity of 600,000 barrels and will be deployed at the Kraken field located in the UK sector of the North Sea. "Our customer wanted to have an experienced supplier with a good track record of delivering safe and reliable offloading systems for demanding North Sea projects," adds Erland Berntsen, Sales Manager, Offshore Loading at MacGregor. Source : PortNews COSCOL Signs Contract to Construct a 90000-ton DWT Semi-Submersible Vessel On 30th June 2014, a contract to build a 90,000-ton DWT semi-submersible vessel was signed between COSCOL(HK) INVESTMENT & DEVELOPMENT CO.,LTD and Guangzhou Shipyard International Co., Ltd. COSCOL(HK) INVESTMENT& DEVELOPMENT CO.,LTD is a subsidiary fully owned by COSCO SHIPPING CO.,LTD (COSCOL). The Vessel will be delivered forth quarter 2016, The 90,000 ton DWT semi-submersible vessel is a part of COSCOL’s plan to increase the semi-submersible fleet it operates. COSCOL is a leading heavy lift transportation company. The 90,000 DWT newbuilding vessel will further enhance the versatility of COSCOL’s fleet by providing a transport solution for the very largest offshore structures. Main dimensions : ◦ Length over all 255.0 metersc◦ Deck Length 210.0 meters ◦ Breadth 68.0 metersc◦ Loaded draft 10.0 meters ◦ Depth 14.5 meters ◦ Deck submersion 16.0 meters Nicaragua claims progress with plan for waterway linking Pacific to Caribbean The Independent newspaper in the UK says Nicaragua has declared that it is "moving forward" with plans to build a waterway linking the Pacific to the Caribbean. The finished project would compete with the Panama Canal, which itself is being upgraded. "Billed as the biggest engineering project in human history, the new canal would stretch 173 miles: starting at the mouth of the river Brito on the Pacific side, bisecting Lake Nicaragua near the border with Costa Rica and heading eastwards via the Tule and Punta Gordas rivers as far as Bluefields Bay on the Caribbean," The Independent explained. With a US$40 billion price tag, the project is the brainchild of President Daniel Ortega, the one-time Marxist guerrilla turned laissez-faire leader, who says it will lift his people out of poverty, and Wang Jing described by the New Yorker magazine as “an obscure Chinese tycoon” - who is a lawyer, not an engineer. The Independent said a special canal committee created by Mr Ortega has now settled on the route for the canal after considering six different options. Members said they expected ground to be broken this December with a highly ambitious 2019 completion date. However, doubts have been raised about the environmental effects of the project, particularly on Lake Nicaragua. Source : Dredging News Online Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 15 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 RNLI appeal to public to help raise £200,000 for new lifeboat A lifesaving service in Northumberland is seeking the public’s help to raise £200,000 for a new lifeboat. Amble Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) has launched a fundraising drive towards the cost of buying a new, state-ofthe-art vessel, in place of an ageing member of its fleet. The Amble station currently has an all-weather Mersey class lifeboat The Four Boys which by 2017 will be nearing the end of her operational life. The RNLI is planning to replace the vessel with the newest member of its fleet, a Shannon class lifeboat. Amble will be one of the first of the charity’s stations in the North of England to receive a Shannon, the first modern RNLI all-weather lifeboat to be powered by water jets instead of propellers and, with a top speed of 25 knots, 50% faster than the vessels she replaces. The £2m Shannon has been designed by in-house RNLI engineers and is the smallest, most agile all-weather lifeboat in the charity’s fleet. The RNLI is now appealing for the public’s help in raising £200,000 towards the cost of the vessel. Amble RNLI coxswain John Connell said: “Our Mersey class lifeboat The Four Boys has served us well and we’ll miss her when she goes, but we’re excited about receiving a Shannon. We’ve already tested one at sea and they’re amazing vessels. “The advanced technology means we’ll be able to reach people in trouble at sea a lot more quickly than we can at the moment. “We know £200,000 is a lot of money to raise but the people of Northumberland have always been very supportive of the RNLI and I’m confident they will get behind the appeal and help us fund our new lifeboat, which will be saving lives off the Northumberland coast for many years to come.” Steve Isaacs, volunteer chairman of the Amble RNLI fundraising committee, added: “We know it’s going to be hard work raising the £200,000 towards the cost of our new lifeboat but everyone involved with the RNLI in Amble is doing their bit towards the appeal. “We already have lots of fundraising ideas but we really hope people in the area will get involved and come up with their own events to support the appeal. “It’s the RNLI Flag Day in Morpeth tomorrow, we have a sponsored walk along the coast ending at the lifeboat station on July 19 and Amble Lifeboat Day on August 24 – all raising money for the appeal. “There are lots more events to come and we’d love to hear from anyone who feels they could contribute in some way towards our fundraising.” The volunteers who run Amble lifeboat station have a long and proud history of saving lives at sea. A lifeboat station was first established in the town in 1842 and, since then, Amble RNLI lifeboats have launched 1,105 times, rescuing 742 people. Source : The Journal Independent Consultants and Brokers in the International Tug and Supply Vessel market (offices in London and Singapore) Telephone : +44 (0) 20 8398 9833 Facsimile : + 44 (0) 20 8398 1618 E-mail : tugs@marint.co.uk Internet : www.marint.co.uk Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 16 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 Tug Crew Assists Disabled Vessel The Coast Guard, Alaska State Troopers, local search and rescue and the crew of the tug Naniq responded to a disabled vessel near Kotzebue, Alaska, Wednesday. The Naniq crew provided gas and a battery to the disabled vessel and escorted them back to Kotzebue. Alaska State Troopers contacted Coast Guard 17th District command center watchstanders to request aerial assistance to help locate three women and a child aboard a disabled 24-foot aluminum Harbercraft. The mariners were traveling from Buckland to Kotzebue when the weather turned bad and they attempted to return to Buckland but had run out of gas. A Coast Guard Air Station Kodiak MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crew launched and were conducting a search of the area when Alaska State Troopers reported the crew of the tug Naniq had located the missing boaters. The Jayhawk helicopter crew rendezvoused with the crew of the tug and barge Naniq who reported the vessel had lost power and run out of gas. The helicopter crew remained on scene while the Naniq crew assisted the disabled boaters. “This case illustrates how invaluable good Samaritans and our local and state agencies are to the Coast Guard,” said Adam De Rocher, a watchstander at Coast Guard 17th District command center. “Without our partners we wouldn’t have been able to locate and provide assistance to the mariners in their time of need.” Weather at the time of the incident was reported as 3- to 5-foot seas and 17 mph winds. Source : MAREX The SMIT CAIAPO performing Bollard Pull test at Santos/Guaruja Photo : Capt. Gerard Gorter Master m.v Jaguar © Engine problem delays arrival of new tug Engine problems have forced Port Otago's new $11 million tug Taiaroa, on its maiden voyage to Port Chalmers, to divert to Lyttelton's dry dock. The 24.5m, 250-tonne tug, built by Netherlands company Damen in Da Nang, Vietnam, is on a course between Brisbane and Cook Strait and is expected to reach Lyttelton by Sunday, Port Otago chief executive Geoff Plunket said. He said the four-man specialist delivery crew had reported a leak, stemming from a problem with the engine cooling system. While it was ''not significant enough'' to consider putting into an Australian port, Lyttelton had a berth available in its dry dock facility, Mr Plunket said. ''We don't believe it to be significant. It could well be just a [blown] seal.'' Taiaroa, which is still under warranty with Damen, would arrive in Lyttelton on Sunday and go into dry dock on Monday. The voyage is more than 5000 nautical miles (9300km). Mr Plunket had expected it to arrive in Dunedin on Monday, but it was ''more likely'' to be sometime between July 18 and 20, he said. Source : Otago Daily Times LR to provide LNG bunkering expertise to Portsmouth port Lloyd’s Register is to identify technical specifications and develop operating procedures for safe LNG bunkering in Portsmouth International Port as the UK port seeks to establish the first LNG bunkering facility and hub in the country. Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 17 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 Lloyd’s Register’s Global Gas Technology Manager, Leonidas Karistios said: "Obviously with growing demand for LNG, ports are looking to understand how they can develop the capability to deliver LNG bunkering services safely. It has to be safety first and Portsmouth is looking to ensure that they have the right, safe, approach to support operational and commercial ambitions. With a city adjacent to the port, significant ferry traffic and a large naval presence, there are substantial and varied stakeholder aspects to be addressed." Brittany Ferries’ latest gas-fuelled newbuild, which is scheduled for delivery in 2016, is set to bunker LNG at Portsmouth. Kalvin Baugh, Deputy Ferry Port Manager, said: "With changes in the regulations governing emissions, it is clear that in the future more shipping will be fuelled by LNG. To help safeguard the port and meet the needs of our customers, Portsmouth International Port needs to be able to offer this facility. Safety is of course the main priority, and we are delighted that Lloyd’s Register has agreed to help us identify the technical specifications and operating procedures that will help to deliver this." Lloyd’s Register will provide Portsmouth Port with detailed guidance, including the following: Requirements for technical specifications of bunkering equipment. Helping to ensure that the right operational procedures are established. Helping to ensure that port safety and emergency planning is provided for. Helping to ensure that personnel competence can be developed effectively and put in place. Planning for an LNG-fuelled future Thanos Koliopulos, Global Special Projects Manager, said: "We can use experience gained in projects like Singapore Port and Viking Grace to apply real project experience to deliver advice for the planning and execution of LNG bunkering to both the port and its bunkering service providers. Particular attention is given to the effective planning and execution of the port’s main clients’ compatibility of operations and all technical aspects for bunker tanker and receiving ship’s facilities. We can help Portsmouth to get ready for real LNG bunkering operations, not only for ferry and short-sea shipping, but our global expertise and perspective can also help them to prepare for supporting LNGfuelled deep sea shipping requirements. Source : LNGindustry The Museum Lifeboat PRINS HENDRIK at the national Lifeboat museum in Den Helder Photo : Piet Sinke © - CLICK on the photo ! Merchant Vessels Warned to Beware Hire of Armed Guards Against Pirates NIGERIA – The situation with regard to piracy, hijackings and theft of all types from freight and passenger vessels and particularly those concerned with energy extraction, transiting the waters off the country’s coast is already dangerous and confused enough without an element of political infighting and the confusion which has arisen when personnel from different branches of local law enforcement have clashed over who has primacy on the open sea. Last October a skiff approaching a Romanian owned oil tanker was fired on by the Nigerian police security team aboard which Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 18 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 believed it to be manned by a pirate group. The boat actually contained a Nigerian Naval patrol which drove the shooters into the vessel’s citadel from which they were later extracted and arrested. This is just one of many similar incidents which have arisen as confusion over where geographical jurisdiction starts and finishes is made more difficult by ‘private’ security escort arrangements with officials made by shady middle men. Certainly the Nigerian Navy seemingly has charge of matters in the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) an area extending up to 200 nautical miles seawards from the coasts of Nigeria within which the country’s authorities reserve the right to regulate by law any and all actions which they see fit. The problem is, which authorities? The Navy also has powers extending to inshore waters when acting as part of the Niger Delta Joint Task Force whilst the Nigerian Maritime Safety Agency (NIMASA), also seems to claim some interest in anything occurring within the EEZ. NIMASA is run by Mr. Ziakede P. Akpobolokemi, whose current agency is allegedly linked to Government Ekpemupolo, poacher turned gamekeeper and the billionaire who was formerly a commander (and alleged military quartermaster) of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) who now, after receiving amnesty five years ago, is alleged to be the power behind Global West Vessel Specialist Ltd. which offers security surveillance in the EEZ acting for NIMASA. NIMASA in turn is linked to the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) which says it collaborates closely with other government security agencies, namely the Marine Police and the Nigerian Navy, to regularly patrol and provide air surveillance for water fronts and river channels to battle the menace of piracy in and around the country’s ports. In addition, the port management department says it provides high speed patrol boats to assist the ‘security agencies’ in their patrols and surveillance. It seems ‘arrangements’ have been made with all and sundry to protect private shipping, a job many have proved woefully inadequate at, with Nigerian Maritime Police being hired out under ‘private’ contracts only to be subsequently arrested and detained by the Navy which has been charged by new leadership to clean up the whole scene. One of the groups most affected by the disastrous security situation in the region are the members of the Baltic and International Maritime Council (BIMCO) which is currently seeking written confirmation from the Nigerian authorities of how it sees the situation. The BIMCO view is explained fully in a recent statement to its members which reads: “BIMCO members operating vessels within the Nigerian EEZ and territorial waters should be aware that they may be at risk of potentially significant liabilities and delays if they employ armed guards on board their vessels who are sourced from the Nigerian Marine Police, the Nigerian Police or the Joint Task Force (JTF). The Nigerian Navy only provides vessel escorts and it is understood to have sole primacy and authority in territorial waters and the EEZ, BIMCO has been advised that the Nigerian Navy does not provide or permit armed guards on merchant vessels. “The Navy has seemingly begun enforcing its alleged authority to prevent the employment of armed guards on board and this has resulted in the arrest of members of the Nigerian Marine Police and consequent delays to the vessel and unresolved liabilities placed on the owners. This appears to apply regardless of whether the armed guard policemen are sourced by an agent or a private military security company (PMSC). “There have also been reports of incidents of ‘blue on blue’ where policemen have opened fire on Nigerian Naval vessels believing they were pirates and where seafarers have been killed or injured in the crossfire. Apparently, the Marine Police and Police only have primacy and jurisdiction in ‘riverine’ areas and ports and harbours out to the fairway buoy and no further. “The JTF against terrorists, is a combined task force of navy and police, with a specific role to counter oil theft and smuggling in the Delta. The JTF is understood to have no jurisdiction outside this remit. The transit of supply vessels up the Bonny River to Port Harcourt is arranged by the JTF and these ships go in convoys (for a charge) whilst the offshore oil export Terminals are patrolled by private security units or the Nigerian Navy. “It would seem that the only legitimate method of acquiring armed security protection in territorial waters and the EEZ of Nigeria is by utilising the services of the Nigerian Navy (although, this seems to exclude armed guards on board vessels).” Source : handyshippingguide Maersk warns of higher charges tied to low-sulfur limits Maersk Line said its customers face an additional charge of between $50 and $150 per 40-foot container on North American and North European routes that will be affected by new low-sulfur fuel limits that come into force in January. The carrier said its fuel bill will increase by around $250 million a year to comply with an International Maritime Organization regulation compelling ships sailing in so-called emission control areas to burn fuel with a sulfur content of 0.1 percent compared with the current 2 percent limit. The ECAs cover the Baltic Sea, the North Sea, the English Channel and 200 miles from the U.S. and Canadian shores. Maersk expects to purchase 650,000 metric tons of fuel Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 19 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 with 0.1 percent sulfur content annually from 2015, equivalent to 7 percent of the total fuel burned by its fleet. Lowsulfur fuel is approximately $300 a metric ton cheaper than 1 percent fuel. The carrier said it would also face increased costs for buying services from third-party feeder operators who will also have higher fuel bills. Maersk will incorporate the higher average fuel costs into the existing standard bunker surcharge. “We expect that (the) additional cost to customers in affected trades will be between $50 and $150 per 40-foot container to and from main ports, depending on transit time inside ECA areas and whether touching ECA areas at both origin and destination,” the carrier said. Refrigerated containers will incur higher costs because of the fuel used to generate power on board vessels. Costs also will fluctuate because of the volatility of low-sulfur fuel prices. Maersk said it would communicate more detailed standard bunker surcharge increases closer to the implementation of the low-sulfur rules and when price differences between fuels can be more precisely estimated. Source : Journal of Commerce The Survey vessel GEO MOTION in the Dutch port of Den Helder Photo : Piet Sinke © - CLICK on the photo ! Asia Tankers-VLCC rates to diverge on vessel supply, cargo demand differences By Keith Wallis Rates for very large crude carriers (VLCCs) on key Asian freight routes will likely move in opposite directions next week, with rates from the Middle East set to edge down on too much vessel supply and rates climbing from West Africa on rising demand, brokers said on Friday. "There is probably four times more tonnage than there is cargo" in Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 20 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 the Middle East VLCC market, said Kevin Sy, a freight derivatives broker at Singapore's Marex Spectron. There are about 25 VLCCs available for charter with just a handful of cargoes still waiting to be fixed for July, said another Singapore-based VLCC broker. Ship owners are waiting for the August fixture programme to be released by charterers, Sy added. He estimated there would be 120-125 fixtures in both July and August "unless something changes" which would be in line with recent VLCC market activity. Norwegian ship broker Fearnley said there had been about 111 fixtures so far for July in a research note on Wednesday. "Rates will probably be flat or ease off a bit next week," Sy and the other broker said. This followed a slight rally in the Middle East to Asia rates early this week on increased cargo demand and owners resisted charterers' attempts to push the market lower although the market started to dip on Thursday. Charter rates from West Africa to Asia are expected to gain further next week on steady cargo demand and limited available tonnage, brokers said. Unipec was the most active charterer in both markets fixing 11 VLCCs from the Middle East and West Africa to China. Rates for a VLCC voyage on the benchmark route from the Middle East to Japanwere close to W50 on the Worldscale measure on Thursday, up from W48 a week earlier. Rates for West Africa to China rose to around W52.50 on Thursday, the highest since Feb. 25. In other trades, rates for 80,000-tonne aframax tankers from Southeast Asia to East Coast Australia appeared to be levelling off after slipping to W90 on Thursday, down from W91 a week earlier. This followed a fall from W99.5 the previous week. Clean tanker rates from Singapore to Japan edged down to around W107.50 on Thursday from W108.50 last week although they were expected to remain steady on renewed cargo demand, a Singapore clean tanker broker said on Friday. Source : Reuters (Reporting By Keith Wallis; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu) NAVY NEWS USS Virginia returns from surge deployment Attack submarine USS Virginia (SSN 774) returned home to Groton, Conn., July 3, after completing a 14-week surge deployment overseas. Virginia’s crew of more than 140 officers and enlisted personnel departed March 28 to conduct assigned theater security missions in the U.S. European Command region. Cmdr. Steven Antcliff, Virginia’s commanding officer, expressed pride in his team’s performance. “The surge deployment proved the professionalism and dedication of the crew and their families,” said Antcliff. “Crew performance was outstanding.” Virginia deployed one month after completing a six-month deployment in the U.S. 6th Fleet area of responsibility Feb. 13. Vice Adm. Philip Davidson, the 6th Fleet commander, sent Virginia’s crew a congratulatory message days before the submarine arrived home from the latest deployment. “Well done to the officers and crew of USS Virginia,” said Davidson. “Your presence unquestionably enhanced America’s safety and security.” Davidson characterized the crew’s ability to deploy for nine of the past 11 months as a “testament to the readiness and tenacity” of the submarine force. As the first ship of the Navy’s next-generation attack submarine class, Virginia is a highly capable undersea platform. Source : Dolphin-News Navy Light Combat Aircraft to soon begin test flights New Delhi: The naval variant of India's indigenous light combat aircraft (LCA) is due to soon begin ramp trials. Avinash Chander, scientific adviser to the Defence Minister and Director General Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), told India Strategic magazine (www.indiastrategic.in) that the LCA-Navy had already done more than 25 test flights from a runway. As these were successful and met the designated parameters, the aircraft will now be deployed at a naval base in Goa to commence ramp flights, probably after the monsoon. Goa, on the Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 21 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 Arabian seafront, has a major naval air station, INS Hansa, where the MiG-29Ks for Indian aircraft carriers are also located. Flight tests are being conducted with LCA Mark-I to prove certain technologies and to familiarise the naval pilots The station has a 14-degree ramp along with necessary tesxting sensors and paraphernalia to monitor the flights and was specifically built as part of the indigenous LCA-Navy development programme. But as it is a national naval asset, it is shared by the MiG-29Ks for training pilots and flight tests. Both the aircraft need the same degree in the ramp, matching the one on INS Vikramaditya, acquired from Russia, and INS Vikrant, now being built at the Kochi shipyard. Chander said that the flight tests are being conducted with LCA Mark-I to prove certain technologies and to familiarise the naval pilots with them. One aircraft is operational, another is on the anvil and a third will son be available to complete the trials. After that, for full weaponised operations aboard carriers, will come the LCA Mark-II powered by GE 414 engines, according to India Strategic. The naval variant, being tested from the HAL airport in Bangalore, has a bigger undercarriage that Hindustan Aeronautics has built to facilitate deck landings. The development programme is coordinated by a one-star naval pilot. Source : IbnNews Thai Commander Welcomes New Submarine Centre, Despite Lack of Subs BANGKOK: A Thai navy commander pushed for the country to acquire its first submarines, following the opening of a new submarine centre in Chonburi province, south-east of Bangkok. "I think [that having submarines] are necessary because it makes our navy more dynamic and it will be useful for self-defence in the Gulf [of Thailand]," said Panu Punyavirocha, commander of Thailand's submarine unit. The centre, equipped with a German-made submarine simulator, was opened on Monday to train combat-ready personnel in case the country does acquire submarines. The navy has been petitioning the government to purchase the vessels. The navy also plans to send officers for training in Germany to gain knowledge about modern submarine warfare. Critics of the navy's submarine plans point to the navy's purchase of the aircraft carrier Chakri Nareubet, which the navy had also described as necessary for defence. Due to budget cutbacks the carrier currently sits at anchor year round serving as a museum ship. Source : thephuketnews SA Navy enters Knysna Herald The Navy's SAS Umhloti, under the command of Commander Brian Short, entered Knysna The Minehunter of the Mine Countermeasures Squadron is berthed at Thesen's Jetty. The ship's arrival was originally expected on Tuesday, but it had to be delayed due to sea trials after mechanical refits to ensure that the vessel was safe and sea-worthy. The ship is open for visits on Saturday and Sunday, between 10:00 and 17:00. Source : Knysna-Plett Oil Spill from U.S. Navy Ship Contained A U.S. Coast Guard pollution response crew in Boston is responding to an oil spill from the USNS Fisher, dry docked at the Boston Ship Repair facility. The spill, estimated at approximately 11,000 gallons, is self-contained in dry dock and there is currently no oil in the water. Responders include a Coast Guard Sector Boston facility and pollution response team, the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, and the Boston Fire Department. Response teams placed 600 feet of double boom around the dry dock to ensure no oil enters the water and six commercial vacuum trucks were deployed to clean up the spill. "This is a classic example of how partnerships and consistent training help us respond quickly to pollution incidents," said Petty Officer 2nd Class Jeanette Wheatley, a marine science technician at Coast Guard Sector Boston. "Our goal now is to continue to Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 22 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 mitigate the impact to the environment and port, and to monitor air quality levels in the surrounding area." In an average year, the Coast Guard responds to 250 reports of pollution in the northeastern U.S. Source : MAREX SHIPYARD NEWS MP: Yes vote will have impact on Inverclyde shipyard workers INVERCLYDE shipyard workers’ jobs could be put at risk if Scotland votes for independence, according to their boss and union leaders. INVERCLYDE shipyard workers’ jobs could be put at risk if Scotland votes for independence, according to their boss and union leaders. Sir Roger Carr, the chairman of the United Kingdom’s largest defence contractor BAE Systems, said that he doesn’t believe the UK government would commission warships to be built in an independent Scotland. Senior BAE trade union officials told Westminster’s Scottish Affairs Select Committee that staying in the UK is the only way to secure the future of shipbuilding in Scotland. BAE run the yards at Govan and Scotstoun, pictured, where a couple of hundred Inverclyde people work. Reacting to the comments, Inverclyde MP Iain McKenzie claimed the SNP’s plan to break up Britain will have a detrimental impact on Scotland’s defence sector. Mr McKenzie, who is Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Shadow Secretary of State for Defence, Vernon Coaker, said: “It is now clearer than ever that, in the event of a ‘yes’ vote in September, hundreds of Inverclyde workers at BAE in Glasgow will pay the price. “The Secretary of State for Defence, the Ministry of Defence, the Shadow Defence Secretary, BAE officials and union officials have been in total agreement over the future of Scotland’s shipyard sector. “The UK builds warships for the United Kingdom. Should Scotland vote to leave the UK we would not, as a foreign country, receive contracts from the UK Government and the Ministry of Defence.” He added: “The way to secure the future of Scotland’s shipyards is to opt for a strengthened Scottish Parliament within a United Kingdom by voting ‘no’ in September.” Sir Roger Carr was asked in a BBC interview about the prospect of a remaining UK Government placing shipbuilding orders in a separate Scotland, and replied: “We build warships in the United Kingdom for the United Kingdom,” and added there was no evidence that would change. He also left open the possibility that BAE could resume shipbuilding at Portsmouth. Meanwhile, Henry Wilson, Unite staff convener at BAE, said trade unions were in ‘no doubt whatsoever’ that UK defence contracts would not be awarded to a foreign country, which is what Scotland would become. Eric McLeod, GMB convener at BAE’s Rosyth yard, said it would be understandable that jobs could go to other UK shipyards if Scotland voted for separation. And Raymond Duguid, Unite convener and trade union chairman at Rosyth, said the nationalists had not given union members any clarity or certainty on their plans, instead offering ‘milk and honey’ which he did not think Scottish people were ‘daft enough’ to believe. Source : greenocktelegraph Simplex-Turbulo Co Ltd wins the Fujian Huadong shipyard representation There is a great deal going on in the world of ship repair with increasing regulation, environmental pressures and commercial competition pushing ship owners and managers to seek more efficient and cost-effective yards working to Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 23 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 high standards. Vessel types and sizes are changing. The result is that many owners and managers are now reassessing their requirements and looking for ship repair yards which can offer better facilities as well as streamlined, modern methodologies. Simplex-Turbulo Co Ltd represents three dry docks, Jurong (Singapore), Astander (Northern Spain) and Fujian Huadong (China), all of which offer attractive solutions to many of today’s requirements. The newest agency is for the Fujian Huadong shipyard. As with other yard representations this yard ticks all the important boxes – location, facilities, efficiency, and quality, all at an acceptable cost. The Fujian Huadong shipyard is located on the northern side of Fujian Luoyuan Bay, possibly the best sheltered deep-water port in China. It’s centrally positioned on the eastern seaboard of China, equidistant from Shanghai and Guangzhou and north west of Taiwan. It’s particularly well placed for many of the most popular Asian sea routes. It has the additional advantage of having a very reasonable climate and not suffering from the extreme cold (and resulting delays to work progress) of the Shanghai winter, or the tropical heat which hampers work in yards further south. Fujian is a very versatile yard, able to carry out repairs on a very wide range of vessels, including container ships, tankers, bulkcarriers and specialist vessels such as bunkering stations. The yard has three very large docks and a lot of pier space. Fujian Huadong shipyard often works together with major shipyards in both Shanghai and Guangzhou, for example in the building of a floating hotel for the offshore sector, built in Guangzhou, which was then moved and fitted out in Fujian Huadong. All these advantages have resulted in the yard building an international customer base with fleets from Hong Kong, South Korea, China, Singapore, Germany and Greece. Fujian Huadong is a new shipyard built in 2011, with all the latest technology and using modern working practices and methods. A second phase of construction is now in progress which will result in an additional 240m x 120m dock dedicated to specific engineering projects; this will make it one of the largest and most attractive repair shipyards on this 800 miles long Chinese coast. ROUTE, PORTS & SERVICES First cargo from Papa-Terra The first cargo was successfully offloaded from what is expected to be Chevron's largest investment in Brazil - the offshore Papa-Terra heavy oil development in the Campos Basin. The Chevron owned Suezmax ‘Brasil Voyager’, was specifically built with to offload oil from Papa-Terra. The first offloading at Papa-Terra represents an important milestone for the company, reinforces the progress being made by the project and highlights the success of the partnership between Chevron and Petrobras," said Les Wood, a manager with Chevron Brazil. On 9th May, ‘Brasil Voyager’lifted about 740,000 barrels of oil from Papa-Terra's FPSO. The oil came from the first two production wells in the field. The Suezmax is expected to offload around 950,000 barrels of crude from Papa-Terra every 40 days. Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 24 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 "The ‘Brasil Voyager’ is now bringing cargo to the market, including providing supply to the Pascagoula refinery and we look forward to its return to the Papa-Terra Field for the next Chevron shipment," Wood said. On 12th May, production began from a third well at Papa-Terra. Two additional wells are expected to start producing to the FPSO this year. The Papa-Terra Field lies in about 1,189 m of water. The project includes the FPSO, as well Brazil's first tension-leg well platform (TLWP), which was installed in the field in April. Heavier-oil production wells will lead to the platform while lighter-oil production wells will tie back to the FPSO. First oil from the TLWP is expected later this year. The project has a planned daily capacity of 140,000 barrels of crude oil and 35 mill cu ft of natural gas. Source : Tankeroperator The ROBIJN passing Puttershoek – Photo : Paul Gerdes © Seagull leads bulk carrier and offshore learning initiatives New titles addressing bulk carrier operations and cargo liquefaction are among a comprehensive series of new modules being introduced by computer-based training specialist, Seagull AS. Introduction to bulk carriers and Liquefying cargoes are the first in a series of ten new titles Seagull is releasing this year and in 2015, each covering crucial aspects of bulk shipping operations. Introduction to bulk carriers is directed at deck, STCW operational level and assists the learner in identifying bulk, ore and combination carriers, commonly used classifications, and the typical types of cargo carried by these vessels. It helps the learner recognise the key commercial aspects of the bulk carrier trade and identify the uses of equipment specific to these vessel types and relevant safety issues. Liquefying cargoes addresses the dangers of carrying cargoes that might liquefy during the voyage, make the ship unstable and lead to the possible loss of the ship, cargo and crew. Cargo liquefaction has resulted in severe loss of crew life in recent years. The module is directed at deck, STCW and operational staff and it assists the learner in recognising the particular hazards and precautions associated with the carriage of IMSBC Code Group A cargoes (cargoes which may liquefy). “Intercargo has described nickel ore as the world’s most dangerous and the liquefaction of nickel ore cargoes during transport was responsible for the loss of 66 lives in South East Asia from 2009 to 2011 alone,” says Roger Ringstad, Seagull Managing Director. “The module discusses the nature of liquefaction and explains the key definitions in the International Maritime Solid Bulk Cargoes (IMSBC) Code. The responsibilities of the cargo shipper to test the cargo and to demonstrate its safety to the Certifying Authority of the loading port if necessary are covered.” In addition to the two modules on bulk carriers, Seagull has made a significant contribution to the understanding of risks in the offshore industry with three new titles, Working at height, Anchor handling operation and GOMO (Guidelines for Offshore Marine Operations) awareness. Working at height covers how to access elevated working places safely and the correct use of a waist belt safety harness and a full body safety harness when attached to a fall restraint or a fall arrest system. The module examines the use of cranes to transfer personnel between a vessel and installation and features high rescue techniques used for a disabled or unconscious person. This module is aimed at deck/engine STCW operational and support level personnel. Anchor handling operation uses video recorded on an anchor handler blended with sound and additional images to achieve the learning objectives. It shows the vessel preparing in port and sailing to the rig location. The anchor is seen Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 25 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 being received from the rig and decked to disconnect it from the chain which is then stowed in the vessel’s anchor bins. With the required amount of chain stowed, the chain is broken to add a buoyed wire insert to clear a sub-sea obstruction. Once this is completed the final operation of re-connecting the anchor and deploying it using a buoy pennant is seen. As with the Working at height module, Anchor handling operation is directed at deck/engine STCW operational and support level personnel The objective of GOMO awareness is to provide guidance to the best practices to promote the safety on board all vessels servicing and supporting offshore facilities, and to reduce the risks associated with such operations including accidents and pollution incidents. The module identifies the crucial role of good communications for safe operations and also the action to be undertaken when an operation is not covered by GOMO Guidelines. This module is directed at all personnel involved in safety onboard ship. Seagull has also released a number of modules covering a variety of topics including piracy and armed robbery, anchor handling, leadership and communication for maritime leaders, green passport (inventory of hazardous materials), engineering in cold environments and recovery of persons from water. “Our continually expanding series of modules dedicated to the many various disciplines of the international maritime industry underscore our commitment to helping users achieve best practice and maintain safe and environmentallyfriendly operations,” says Mr. Ringstad. The RIJNBORG outbound from Rotterdam – Photo : Ruud Zegwaard - ://tugfoto.blogspot.com/ - ://merchantshipsphoto.blogspot.com/ (c) : Iain Forsyth © Bamse [Norwegian for Teddy Bear] 1937 till 22nd July 1944 was a St Bernard dog that became the Heroic Mascot of the Free Norwegian Forces during the Second World War. He became a heroic symbol of Norwegian freedom during the war. Bamse was bought in Oslo by Capt Erling Hafto, the Master of the Norwegian Whaler Thorodd and was taken to sea from an early age. At the onset of the war Thorodd was drafted into the Royal Nowegian Navy as a coastal patrol vessel. Bamse was enrolled as an official crew member 9th April 1940. Thorodd escaped the mainland Norway capitulation and arrived in the UK 17th June 1940 and was based in Montrose as a Minesweeper for the duration of the war. A parade is to take place in Montrose on 21July this year to celebrate the life of Bamse, The Royal Norwegian Navy send a warship to Montrose every year in memory of their heroic mascot Bamse. Photo’s Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 26 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 As seen from the CORAL IVORY the 1912 built SVANEFJORD already moored for a very long time at the small island named Oaxen Photo : Hans : Hans Semeins o/b Coral Ivory © New innovative information provider enters Rotterdam port community The new information provider InterTransIS has entered the Rotterdam port community market with a range of innovative information products. InterTransIS was founded by four experts in the field of transport & logistics information on July 23th 2013 and has spent the last year contracting different worldwide data providers and developing intelligent high end software. In contrast to existing information providers InterTransIS covers all modalities, road, rail, inland- as well as short- and deep-sea shipping. The power of the InterTransIS product range can be found in the real time combination of different data sources with process knowledge, providing information that directly can be used in the decision making processes of the customer reducing supply chain inefficiencies. (According to university research 73,9% of transport inefficiencies is caused by lack of timely information). The InterTransIS product range will be further extended in the coming months and will become available for all worldwide ports and logistic service providers. Currently the Electronic Expected Vessel list Rotterdam is being rolled out to the port community. This intelligent ‘expected list’ for seagoing vessels does not only contain agent or AIS based expected arrival times but actually checks, recalculates and predicts feasible arrival times based on a complex algorithm combining local agent information with actual positions, weather- and sea state conditions and port planning information. The algorithm is self-learning, further improving results over time. InterTransIS developed a platform (Tram4U) that operates fully automated without the need of manual checking thus providing much more reliable and consistent results. InterTransIS products under development include: • Full ‘active’ electronic reporting services • ISPS announcement services • Various inland vessel related applications • Various trucking and rail applications • Container tracking • Full supply chain tracking & reporting For more information contact sales@intertransis.com or visit the website www.intertransis.com. Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 27 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 COSCO (Guang Dong) Shipyard to build two more PSVs for Vroon COSCO (Guang Dong) Shipyard Co. Ltd is going to build a further two platform supply vessels of the ULSTEIN PX121 design for Vroon Offshore Services, the Netherlands. Ulstein has entered into an agreement with COSCO on delivering ship design, power & control equipment and on-site follow-up services.The first of totally six vessels in this series, VOS Pace, was launched on 30 June, Ulstein said in its press release. “The PX121 design is becoming increasingly attractive to oil companies as it offers a competitive combination of fuelefficiency and cargo capacities/deadweight,” comments Sigurd Viseth, Managing Director of Ulstein Design & Solutions. “This translates to a performance level that is usually expected from larger PSVs, but at a medium-sized PSV cost - delivering excellent value-for-money for the owner and operator. We’re delighted that Vroon sees the compelling benefits of this vessel.” Each of Vroon’s six PSVs is scheduled for delivery in 2015 and intended for operation in European waters. Measuring 83.4 metres in length, with a beam of 18 metres, they boast a rectangular cargo deck of 830 square metres and a load capacity of 4,200 tonnes (dwt). Thanks to flexible tank capacities, the PX121 is set up to support drilling activities with longer and deeper boreholes and activities further from shore. In addition to tanks for oil, water and drilling fluids, the vessel also has two stainless steel tanks for flammable liquids or corrosive chemicals. Each ship will be equipped with dynamic positioning system Class II and meets the requirements of ‘Clean Design’, according to ABS class. The PX121, which has a maximum speed of approximately 15 knots and modern accommodation for 23 people, also comes with the iconic ULSTEIN X-BOW®. The X-BOW offers efficiency over a wide draught range, which is important for PSVs as they often operate with varying loads. Furthermore, the X-BOW has unique, advantageous qualities in terms of motion and propulsion efficiency in moderate and heavy seas. Its innovative shape eliminates wave slamming and bow impact delivering better performance, while reducing noise and vibration, which in turn translates to enhanced crew comfort and safety levels. Source : PortNews The BESIKTAS ICELAND enroute Rotterdam – Photo : Dirk van Uitert © Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 28 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 BOEKBESPREKING By : Frank NEYTS “Reize naar Surinamen” Bij Walburg Pers verscheen onlangs ‘Reize naar Surinamen. Dagboek van John Gabriël Stedman 1772-1777, moderne vertaling door Michaël Ietswaart’. In 1772 nam John Gabriël Stedman, zoon van een Schotse vader en een Nederlandse moeder, dienst als huurling van een expeditieleger dat onder bevel stond van de Zwitserse kolonel Fourgeoud. Dit huurlingenleger werd door de Staten-Generaal van de Verenigde Nederlanden naar Suriname gestuurd om een opstand onder weggelopen negerslaven te onderdrukken en het voortbestaan van het Nederlands gezag in de kolonie te verzekeren. Gedurende zijn verblijf in de Nederlandse kolonie, van 1772 tot 1777, hield Stedman een dagboek bij van zijn leven in Suriname. Op basis van dit dagboek verscheen in 1796 in Engeland een boek van zijn hand dat van grote invloed zou zijn op de discussie over de afschaffing van de slavernij. Nu pas werd de wrede behandeling van de slaven in Suriname echt duidelijk. Het boek droeg er toe bij dat men in Europa anders over slavernij ging denken. Naast ‘de strijd’ tegen de weggelopen slaven geeft het boek ook een interessante inkijk in het alledaagse Surinaamse leven in de tijd van Stedman. De beschrijving van zijn relatie met de slavin Joanna, bij wie hij een zoon verwekt, boeit van begin tot eind. Al met al laat het boek een onthullend beeld zien van Suriname en de daar heersende slavernij aan het eind van de 18e eeuw. Met deze verkorte versie in een moderne vertaling komt een van de boeiendste verslagen uit eerste hand over het Nederlands koloniaal verleden weer tot leven. “Reize naar Surinamen” (ISBN 978-90-5730-969-4) telt 303 pagina’s, werd als softback uitgegeven, en kost 24,95 euro. Aankopen kan via de boekhandel of rechtstreeks bij Uitgeversmaatschappij Walburg Pers, Postbus 4159, 7200BD Zutphen. Tel. +32(0)575.510522, Fax +31(0)575.542289. . In België wordt het boek verdeeld door Agora Uitgeverscentrum, Aalst/Erembodegem. Tel. 053/76.72.26, Fax 053/78.26.91, E-mail: info@agorabooks.com. PLEASE MAINTAIN YOUR MAILBOX, DUE TO NEW POLICY OF THE PROVIDER, YOUR ADDRESS WILL BE “DEACTIVATED” AUTOMATICALLY IF THE MAIL IS BOUNCED BACK TO OUR SERVER If this happens to you please send me a mail at newsclippings@gmail.com to reactivate your address again You can also read the latest newsletter daily online via the link : ://newsletter.maasmondmaritime.com/ShippingNewsPdf/magazine.pdf …. PHOTO OF THE DAY ….. The CAPE KENNEDY leaving the Ijmuiden locks bound for Rotterdam - Photo : Simon Wolf (c) Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 29 DAILY COLLECTION OF MARITIME PRESS CLIPPINGS 2014 – 193 The compiler of the news clippings disclaim all liability for any loss, damage or expense however caused, arising from the sending, receipt, or use of this e-mail communication and on any reliance placed upon the information provided through this free service and does not guarantee the completeness or accuracy of the information UNSUBSCRIBE / UITSCHRIJF PROCEDURE To unsubscribe click (English version) or visit the subscription page on our website. ://www.maasmondmaritime.com/en/unsubscribe/ Om uit te schrijven klik (Nederlands) of bezoek de inschrijvingspagina op onze website. ://www.maasmondmaritime.com/nl/uitschrijven/ Distribution : daily to 30100+ active addresses 12-07-2014 Page 30