All Motorship articles in Web Issue – Page 1095
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Trade and terror
The need to ensure the safety and security of vessels at sea and in port is as important as the high-profile fight against terrorism.According to a report issued by the ICC International Maritime Bureau?s Kuala Lumpur-based Piracy Reporting Centre, there were 370 reported attacks on shipping worldwide last year ? ...
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Investments to up productivity
The quest is on at Korean shipyards to make most productive use of drydock space. Song Deuk Lee, director of the international cooperation office at the Korea Shipbuilders? Association, reckons Korean shipbuilders? productivity is rising but is still about 10% below that of Japanese shipbuilders. Drydock turnover in Korea is ...
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Spain?s marine expo
The first major marine event of 2003 was held in Bilbao, the capitol of Spain?s Basque country. And, fittingly for a region with a centuries-old maritime tradition, Sinaval-Eurofishing showed strong growth in visitor and exhibitor numbers despite an uncertain economic climate and the devastation wrought upon the Spanish fishing industry ...
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Dover to install QuaySailor
Dover Harbour Board is evaluating the installation of an automated mooring system at two new ferry berths it is building in its Eastern Docks. The UK port has commissioned Mooring Systems, the New Zealand-based developer of the automated QuaySailor vacuum mooring design, to produce working drawings for an initial installation. ...
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Responding to demand upswings
It was not so long ago that talk was of when and not if a box ship with a capacity greater than 10,000 TEU would be built. That talk has subsided in recent years. World trade took a downturn as the 21st century rolled in and ships half that size ...
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Upping levels of customer service
Engine companies are developing training packages as products evolve and the recruitment environment changes. They have for some time offered formal classroom-based product training. However the new packages and facilities take their customer service to new levels.Wärtsilä, for example, has recently established the Wärtsilä Land and Sea Academy (WLSA) in ...
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Nanotechnology could provide cleaner fuels
Scientists from the University of Aarhus, Denmark, have developed a technique that could improve the commercial processes used to remove environmentally harmful sulphur from fossil fuels. This is currently done using a catalyst, which binds the harmful sulphur molecules to it. The Danish team have studied the chemical reactions that ...
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Meeting challenges
Korean shipbuilders are faced with a number of problems as the industry in their country matures. Traditionally they have competed against Japan largely on a price basis. Now they need to look over their shoulders at China on price. Talk has now turned to productivity and quality of product, the ...
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Breaking ground
Develop design. Begin domestic marketing. Sell first ships. Build reputation. Commence exports. Increase complexity. Prepare for next market. Repeat cycle. This is the basic pattern that Korean shipbuilding has followed since its modern era took off. Now the shipbuilders are at the stage where they are ready for their next ...
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Cruise ferries keep getting bigger
Just when one ferry company claims it is building, or has just put into service, the world?s largest cruise ferry, along comes another operator announcing it is building an even bigger ship. This game of one upmanship reached new heights when Norwegian ferry operator Color Line recently placed an order ...
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Birka?s bigger Baltic
The Mariehamn-based Birka Line, which operates the 1986-built 22,712g Birka Princess cruise/ ferry ship, placed an order late last year with the Finnish shipbuilding yard of Aker Finnyards for the construction of a new vessel. The 33,000g 1,800 passenger ship will cost about $167 million and is slated for delivery ...
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Appealing to the young generation
Encouraging youngsters from developed countries to embark on a career at sea is a problem many shipping companies say they suffer from. They argue that in developed countries going to sea and getting their hands dirty is simply not as attractive a career proposition for school leavers as it was ...
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Not all offshore
Singapore?s marine industry enjoyed a good run last year driven by strong demand from the offshore sector. The outlook for this sector remains good even though overall marine demand is expected to taper off slightly.According to the Economic Development Board, Singapore?s marine industry grew by 16 per cent in output ...
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Alliance to construct new aircraft carriers
A tripartite alliance involving BAE Systems, Thales UK and the Ministry of Defence (MoD) will be responsible for building two new aircraft carriers in a £2.7 billion ($4.3 billion) future carrier programme for the Royal Navy. This follows an announcement in January by Britain?s Secretary of State for Defence, Geoff ...
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Adapting to new demands
Hyundai Heavy Industries and HSD Engine are adapting to the demands of building larger two-stroke models and electronic-controlled engines. HSD Engine, created by the consolidation of the engine divisions of Doosan (formerly Hanjung), Samsung and Daewoo, has recently won orders for seven MAN B&W 12K98MC-C engines, whose unit output of ...
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The ultimate status symbol
Superyachts are getting big and sophisticated enough to be called small cruise ships ? so it?s no surprise that traditional cruise ship builders are sizing up this booming marketThey say size matters and nowhere is this truer than with luxury super yachts which are considered to be the ultimate rich ...
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When repair won?t do
When a vessel has been in operation for more than 10 years, several onboard systems may be well into their useful lives. The same applies to the propeller, which may have been repaired, cleaned and polished several times during this period. A modernisation could be in order, or even replacement. ...
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Pipework options
Much research has been done on the performance of various pipework materials when used on saltwater systems. Copper-nickel alloys have been specified for seawater use for over 50 years and are the materials of first choice for seawater pipework and condenser service for many of the world?s navies and merchant ...
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Regasifying LNG at offshore sites
Security is an unavoidable issue in today?s climate of terrorism derived fear and paranoia. Such security fears are strongly impacting development in the natural gas industry, particularly where gas comes ashore at receiving terminals. Many communities now view the risk of such plants, however slight, as unacceptable whatever the economic ...
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Sucking up silt in France?s waterways
Toward the tail end of last year, Izar?s shipyard in Gijon, northern Spain, delivered a second dredger to the French national dredging company Dragages-Ports in Rouen. Named Samuel de Champlain, the 8,500m3 trailing suction hopper dredger is designed for harbour and channel entrance maintenance work in waterways controlled by the ...