Category: Shipbuilding

Progress is also being made in Stade

The port company Niedersachsen Ports (NPorts) has awarded the contract for the construction of a second jetty for the handling of liquefied natural gas - LNG handling is to start in Stade in winter 2023/2024 in order to strengthen Germany's security of supply with gas. A new port infrastructure and superstructure must be developed in good time for this. NPorts says: "We have been racing against time for six months and have achieved our interim goals. The authorisation for the early start of construction, the financing and now the award procedure have been completed by us in record time. Now the race continues and we are looking forward to rapid progress and...

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New research vessel

The Hitzler shipyard in Lauenburg will build the "Ludwig Prandtl II" to replace its namesake. The Helmholtz Centre Hereon in Geesthacht is the client for the 15 million euro new build, which is being financed by the federal government. The new vessel is 29.90 metres long, eight metres wide and only 1.6 metres deep. The crew will consist of two or three people. There will also be space for up to twelve researchers on board. They will have 47 square metres of laboratory space and a 70 square metre work deck at their disposal. The "Ludwig Prandtl II" is due to be delivered in 2024 and will then be used for coastal research. At the same time, ways to achieve a sustainable...

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Europe's shipyards continue to lose market share

According to the Bremen Institute of Shipping Economics and Logistics (ISL), 99 per cent of global orders for new merchant ships, measured in CGT (compensated gross tonnes), went to shipyards in Asia in the first six months of the current year. At 47 per cent, the largest share of the approximately 600 newbuild orders with 21 million CGT went to South Korean shipbuilders, who were back in the lead for the first time since 2016, while 43 per cent went to the heavily expanded and highly subsidised shipyards in China. Despite a number of orders from domestic shipping companies, even Japan had to fight hard to secure at least a share, albeit a shrinking one...

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China's specialised ship fleets are growing

China's merchant fleet is not only growing with container ships, but also increasingly in specialised segments. For example, the Chinese company Guangzhou Salvage has strengthened its fleet with the semi-submersible newbuild "Hua Rui Long" built by the shipyard China Merchants Heavy Industry (CMHI) in Haimen. Equipped with DP2 technology for dynamic positioning, the 252 metre long and 60 metre wide special vessel has a tonnage of 74,226 GT and a carrying capacity of 82,000 tdw. The free deck area for transporting heavy and bulky goods, such as drilling rigs or dredgers, is specified at 151,000 square metres and can carry 90 tonnes per square metre.

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No LNG imports via Hamburg

Following the federal government's refusal to financially support Hamburg's plans for a floating LNG terminal (FSRU), these appear to have been abandoned once and for all. The reasons given for the decision in the Hanseatic city are that, on the one hand, extensive dredging work would have been necessary at the planned berth in the Moorburg district and, on the other, that parts of the southern harbour area would have been cut off from traffic, as ships destined for there would not have been able to pass the FSRU and the LNG tanker moored next to it during unloading operations. In addition, time-consuming legal action could have been expected. As an alternative, liquefied natural gas (LNG) is now to be brought in from Brunsbüttel using feeder tankers, if the FSRU is to be used...

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