New addition to the DGzRS
The German Maritime Search and Rescue Association launched its latest rescue cruiser, the SK 41, in Grömitz on 31 January.
Read MorePosted by Marcus Bredick | 31 Jan 2021 | Headlines, News, Shipbuilding | 0
The German Maritime Search and Rescue Association launched its latest rescue cruiser, the SK 41, in Grömitz on 31 January.
Read MorePosted by Marcus Bredick | 30 Jan 2021 | Headlines, Marines from all over the world, News | 0
The Cold War had just ended and Germany was reunited when the frigate "Vasco da Gama" was commissioned by the Portuguese Navy at Blohm+Voss in Hamburg on 18 January 1991. The order for the construction of three Meko 200PN type ships was signed in 1985. The keel for the type ship, the "Vasco da Gama", was laid on 2 February 1989 and the ship was launched on 26 June of the same year. With a length of 115 metres and a width of just under 15 metres, the ships displace a good 2900 tonnes. Their armament consists of a French-designed 100-millimetre gun, 2x3 Mk32 torpedo tubes, two Harpoon launchers, each with four...
Read MorePosted by Marcus Bredick | 29 Jan 2021 | Headlines, Marines from all over the world, News, Shipbuilding | 0
Something new from the shipbuilding industry: The Dutch shipyard Damen started cutting the first steel plates for the Combat Support Ship "Den Helder" last December. What's special about this? This work was not actually planned until February 2021. But then the planners took a closer look at the extensive coronavirus measures at the shipyard in Galati, Romania, and at the suppliers. They predicted that the work might progress more slowly than planned and brought forward the start of firing by two months. This is to ensure the timely delivery of the "Den Helder" despite the restrictions. The...
Read MorePosted by Holger Schlüter | 25 Jan 2021 | Headlines, News, Security policy | 0
In its recently published annual report, IMB Piracy Reporting Centre (PRC) sees the situation in the Gulf of Guinea as a major driver of the increase in piracy cases in 2020 - 195 cases compared to 162 in 2019.
Read MorePosted by Holger Schlüter | 23 Jan 2021 | Headlines, News, Shipping, Technology | 0
On 1 February 2021, Lufthansa is launching the longest passenger flight in its history. At the same time, it is one of the most unusual flights the airline has ever carried out. On behalf of the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) in Bremerhaven, the Lufthansa Group's most sustainable aircraft, an Airbus A350-900, will fly 13,700 kilometres non-stop from Hamburg to Mount Pleasant on the Falkland Islands.
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