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Jan De Nul hones dredgers

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Jan De Nul is extending its offshore fleet with three water injection dredgers (WID).

The company recently purchased three offshore supply vessels and ordered the Singaporean shipyard to convert them into seagoing WIDs.

All the vessels will be equipped for seabed levelling, for lowering offshore wind farm cables and other installation services in offshore wind and oil and gas.

The WIDs are smaller than traditional dredgers and have dynamic positioning and swell compensation. Diesel-electric drivers reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

Giovanni Venturi is the first out of three to be delivered by PaxOcean Shipyard and will be mobilised to its first project in Argentina.

The other two, Henri Pitot and Henry Darcy, are in the process of being converted and will be delivered later this year.

The vessels are fitted with power jetting systems used for the low-pressure injection of water into sediments.

The sediment fluidizes and moves, just above the seabed, through natural sediment streams, unlike traditional dredging methods where sediment is mechanically transported. The process does not impact overlying water layers.

Since the sediment does not need to be transported by means of a hopper, barge or pipeline, water injection dredging is also a more cost-effective technique.

Source:renews

Explosion Injures Two at Indonesian Shipyard

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On Wednesday, an explosion and fire occurred aboard a tanker during repairs at a shipyard in the Riau Islands, injuring two workers. 

At about 1725 hours Wednesday, welders were at work on a tanker at PT Multi Ocean Shipyard (MOS) on Indonesia's Karimunbesar Island. Sparks from the welding reportedly ignited an explosion, leaving two workers with serious burn injuries. 

The two victims were taken to Muhammad Sani Regional General Hospital for treatment. The local police have launched an investigation into the cause of the incident. 

The vessel has been identified as the 8,000 dwt Success Eergy XXXII. AIS data show her moored at the yard as of April 18, and a vessel matching her appearance and company livery is visible in bystander videos. 

It is the second major accident at PT MOS in six months. Last November, a giant airbag that was being used to move a ship exploded at the yard, sending debris flying, according to bystander reports. Sausage-shaped airbags are a low-cost means of lifting and rolling a ship over land, and are sometimes used for launching newbuilds. Nearly two dozen workers sustained minor injuries in the accident. 

Source:maritime-executive

As fires spike on boxships, focus turns to dangerous goods carriage

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Following an above average period of disasters, class society ABS and representatives from the Cargo Incident Notification System (CINS) have formed a joint industry project to develop best practices for carriage of dangerous goods.

CINS is a shipping line initiative, whose aim is to increase safety in the supply chain, reduce the number of cargo incidents onboard ships and highlight the risks caused by certain cargoes and/or packing failures. CINS’s membership comprises over 80% of the world’s container slot capacity.

“Carriage of dangerous goods, not properly identified or accounted for, can be detrimental to the safety of the ship – and, more importantly, to the people on board that ship,” commented ABS vice president for technology, Gareth Burton. “Central to our joint effort is advancing safety by developing a set of best practices incorporating key lessons learned provided by CINS members from past incidents.”

The objective of this project is a comprehensive set of best practices to improve stowage planning and hazard mitigation for dangerous goods carriage, leading to a focused application of existing risk assessment processes.

The number of severe fires onboard boxships caused by the incorrect carriage of dangerous goods has spiked in recent years with the Maersk Honam and Yantian Express being two high profile examples of a worrying growing trend for liner shipping.

Insurer TT Club is pushing for greater scrutiny of dangerous goods carriage onboard boxships, warning that there is now a major containership fire at sea on average every 60 days.

The first three months of this year have been far above the historical average with insurers bracing for massive claims from a series of high profile boxship fires in 2019.

TT Club’s records indicate that across the intermodal spectrum as a whole, 66% of incidents related to cargo damage can be attributed to poor practice in the overall packing process; that is not just in securing but also in cargo identification, declaration, documentation and effective data transfer. The calculated cost of these claims in the marine, aviation and transport insurance sector is in excess of $500m a year.

ICHCA International, the cargo handling operatives association, has calculated that of the 60m packed containers moved each year, 10% or 6m are declared as dangerous goods. Information from published government inspections – which are invariably biased towards declared dangerous goods loads – suggests that 20% of these are poorly packed or incorrectly identified. This translates into 1.3m potentially unstable dangerous goods containers travelling around the world each year.

Source:splash247

Shell makes deepwater oil discovery in the Gulf of Mexico

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 Shell Offshore Inc. has reported an oil discovery at the Blacktip prospect in the deepwater US Gulf of Mexico.

Located in Alaminos Canyon block 380 in about 6,200 ft (1,890 m) of water, Blacktip is a Wilcox discovery in the Perdido thrust belt, about 30 mi (48 km) from the Perdido platform and Whale discovery.

The Blacktip exploration well encountered more than 400 ft (122 m) net oil pay with good reservoir and fluid characteristics. The well is currently being deepened to further assess the structure’s potential.

Evaluation is ongoing and appraisal planning is under way to further delineate the discovery and define development options, Shell said.

Blacktip is operated by Shell (52.375%) and co-owned by Chevron U.S.A. Inc. (20%), Equinor Gulf of Mexico LLC (19.125%), and Repsol E&P USA Inc. (8.5%).

Andy Brown, Upstream Director for Royal Dutch Shell, said: “Blacktip is Shell’s second material discovery in the Perdido corridor and is part of a continuing exploration strategy to add competitive deepwater options to extend our heartlands.”

Blacktip adds to the company’s Paleogene exploration success in the Perdido area. In the last decade, Shell has discovered more than 1 Bboe in the Gulf of Mexico. The company said its global deepwater production is on track to exceed 900,000 boe/d by 2020, from already discovered, established areas.
Source:offshore-mag

Finland Port and Nokia Partner for Next-Gen LTE Network

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The Port of Kokkola, one of Finland’s largest ports, and wireless network operator Ukkoverkot have agreed to collaborate with Nokia on the planning, building and operation of a private LTE network.

As part of the four-year agreement between the companies, Kokkola will utilize this digital platform to become a micro-operator, providing local companies in the port area with private and wireless network connectivity.

According to a statement, Kokkola is a demanding environment with significant data transfer needs across its various operations, including security, device service and the steering of port functions.

The introduction of a private LTE network is expected to meet the demands of Kokkola, enabling efficient and safe port digitalization.

The infrastructure will also be tailored to the specific capacity, usability and coverage needs of the port.

Jyrki Roukala, Development Manager from Port of Kokkola, said: “It’s challenging to create data transfer channels in the vast, 500-hectare port area. At first, we considered using Wi-Fi, but an LTE network is superior thanks to its security, reliability and pervasive coverage."

At the same time, we can commercialize our network by offering slices to other actors in the area.

Jouko Tuppurainen, Director of Ukkoverkot, also commented: “One benefit of this platform is the opportunity for our customer to become a micro-operator as it scales according to their digitalization strategy."

This collaboration is a natural next step in our focus on logistics and industrial companies’ digitalization projects, and it strengthens our leading position as a provider of private LTE networks.

Stephan Litjens, General Manager Nokia Digital Automation, added: “The port infrastructure is a demanding environment, in which multiple actors require reliable, high capacity connectivity making Nokia Digital Automation Cloud an excellent fit."

“Likewise, this Nokia solution is ideal for the Port of Kokkola to access and leverage large pools of IIoT data for more intelligent, efficient and sustainable port operations.”

Source:porttechnology

Seagull Maritime acquires software company Tero Marine

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Tero Marine, headquartered in Bergen, Norway, has developed fleet management software for the shipping industry for more than three decades. The company’s flagship, TM Master, is recognized as one of the leading brands in the business.

Today, TM Master is a crucial tool for shipowners all over the world, not only as an instrument for planned maintenance (and asset management), but also as a business intelligence resource.

Tero Marine is growing fast and has currently more than 55 employees, with offices and representatives in Norway, UK, Singapore, USA, Brazil, Japan and Russia. The software development is mainly conducted at the head office in Bergen, strongly supported by a developer team in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Source:portnews

ExxonMobil increases frontier acreage offshore Namibia

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ExxonMobil has signed an agreement with the government of Namibia and the National Petroleum Corp. of Namibia (NAMCOR) for blocks 1710 and 1810, and farm-in agreements with NAMCOR for blocks 1711 and 1811A.

The blocks, which comprise about 7 million net acres (28,000 sq km), extend from the shoreline to about 135 mi (217 km) offshore Namibia in water depths up to 13,000 ft (3,962 m). The company plans to begin exploration activities in 2019, including acquisition of seismic data and analysis.

ExxonMobil will operate blocks 1710 and 1810 and hold a 90% interest; NAMCOR will hold a 10% interest. ExxonMobil said it will assign 5% of its interest to a local Namibian company.

ExxonMobil will be operator of blocks 1711 and 1811A and will hold an 85% interest. NAMCOR will retain a 15% interest.

The company also holds a 40% interest in the PEL 82 license offshore Namibia, comprising about 2.8 million gross acres (11,500 sq km).

Source:offshore-mag

Penguin primed for Tallinn departure

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Finnish wave energy developer Wello's WEC2 Penguin device has been completed and is ready to depart from a shipyard in Tallinn in Estonia for testing in Orkney, Scotland.

The WEC2 will be towed to Orkney starting in the next few days and installed as soon as it arrives in Scotland, Wello said.

The company said the new technology has 380% increased power production than the WEC1 model.

“WEC2 is a key milestone towards the full potential of ocean-wave energy conversion technology, confirming all calculations and energy costs Wello presented on the Global Wave Energy Potential and Wave Energy Levels map,” Wello said.

WEC2 is funded by both the European Commission’s research and innovation programme Horizon 2020 Clean Energy From Ocean Waves and project participants, it added.

The company is also looking to raise up to €2.5m in exchange for equity between 4.34% and 10.18%, with a minimum investment of 140 shares, at a share price of €3.73 per share.

The funding campaign, which has already raised over €1.4m is being run on Invesdor and is open until 2 May.

 

Occidental makes offer for Anadarko

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Occidental Petroleum Corp. has offered to buy Anadarko Petroleum Corp. for $76.00 per share in a 50-50 cash and stock transaction valued at $57 billion.

Under the proposal, Anadarko shareholders would receive $38.00 in cash and 0.6094 shares of Occidental common stock for each share of Anadarko common stock. Occidental’s proposal represents a premium of approximately 20% to the value of Anadarko’s pending transaction with Chevron as of April 23, 2019.

Occidental President and CEO Vicki Hollub said: “Occidental and Anadarko have a highly complementary asset portfolio, providing us with a unique opportunity to realize significant operating, cost, and capital allocation synergies and achieve near-term cash flow accretion.”

She added: “We have been focused on Anadarko for several years because we have long believed that we are ideally positioned to generate compelling value from a combination with them. We look forward to engaging immediately with Anadarko’s board and stakeholders to deliver this superior transaction.”

In its letter to the Anadarko board of directors, Occidental revealed it has made three acquisition proposals since late March.

Source:offshore-mag

Royal Caribbean starts building fifth Oasis Class cruise ship

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Royal Caribbean announced that it started construction of its fifth Oasis Class cruise ship on April 24 with a steel cutting ceremony. The steel cutting marked the official start of construction, and took place at the Chantiers de l’Atlantique shipyard in Saint-Nazaire, France.

Royal Caribbean noted that the fifth Oasis Class ship will:.."Combine the iconic seven-neighborhood concept that her sister ships feature with a bold and unexpected lineup of thrilling experiences, imaginative dining, unparalleled entertainment and the latest technology."

The, yet unnamed, Oasis-class ship is planned to be delivered to Royal Caribbean in 2021.

It will be delivered after Odyssey of the Seas, which will debut in 2020.

During February 2019, Royal Caribbean signed an agreement with Chantiers de l’Atlantique ordering the sixth Oasis ship for delivery in the fall of 2023.

The order awaits financing, which is expected to be completed in the second or third quarter of 2019.