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Royal Navy Shadows Russian Frigate in English Channel

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Last week, as the U.S. and its NATO partners conducted the largest drills in the alliance's history, the Royal Navy patrol ship HMS Tyne tracked a Russian frigate as it passed through the English Channel.

Tyne is the latest patrol vessel to be activated this year to monitor the activity of Russian surface ships sailing in or close to the UK’s area of interest. Patrol ship HMS Mersey, destroyer HMS Diamond, and frigate HMS Montrose have all been dispatched to observe Russian vessels passing the UK in recent months.

Escorting foreign warships is not only a clear statement of our nation’s determination to protect our area of interest but is also a great opportunity for our people," said Lieutenant Peter Cowan, HMS Tyne’s XO. “It challenges the ship’s company by asking them to prepare and deliver a dynamic tasking and use their expert knowledge and experience to lead us to a successful mission.”

HMS Tyne is part of the Royal Navy's Fishery Protection Squadron. In her everyday role, she conducts marine enforcement operations with the UK's Marine Management Organisation, and she is occasionally tasked to help train new Royal Navy officers in navigation.

Tyne's sister ship HMS Mersey deployed on a similar mission last February to track three Russian Navy ships in the Channel. The deployment attracted attention from critics of the Royal Navy's force structureand capabilities, some of whom suggested that a better-armed frigate would be more appropriate for the assignment. "We always use the appropriate vessels for the task, and if you look at the photographs of the flotilla you'll see that a patrol vessel is the right one on this occasion," a Ministry of Defense spokesperson told the Telegraph. 

Source:maritime-executive

Building the Tools to Explore Beneath Arctic Ice

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Sitting on a stool in tattered painter’s pants, hiking boots and a green t-shirt, Dr. Jason Gobat looks better suited for an afternoon hike than an Arctic expedition. His blue eyes look larger than life as he peers through the magnification goggles in front of him and down through the smoky plume coming from his solder iron. The salt and pepper stubble on his face serves as a reminder of the days he spent getting everything ready for the project that lays ahead. He snips, cuts and solders his way through the tiny circuit board, trying to get it to work again. Finally. It’s fixed. The $5 electronic kitchen timer he bought springs back to life.

When asked why not just use a watch, or a cell phone? Gobat responds, “This is louder.

For someone about to toss $750k worth of equipment into the Arctic Ocean, laboring over a cheap kitchen timer may seem petty, but for Gobat, it punctuates the engineering genius and work ethic he’s become known for in the scientific community. For the past 17 years, Gobat has played a critical role in the development of a key research technology, and that expertise landed him a spot on an Arctic expedition to support the Office of Naval Research.

When he began working in 2001 at the Applied Physics Lab at the University of Washington, Seattle, Gobat was introduced to a prototype device under development at the university. Originally created by Dr. Charles Ericksen, Gobat eventually took over the project and has been developing it ever since. The torpedo-looking device is known as a Seaglider™, and its unique, low-energy design means it can spend up to a year in the water gathering scientific data and transmitting it back to scientists at the lab.

Seagliders are buoyancy-driven autonomous underwater vehicles,” Gobat said. “What makes them unique is they are energy efficient because they don’t have any external moving parts, and they move through the water just by changing their buoyancy. In essence, they are a buoyancy driven float with wings. Instead of sinking like a rock and rising like a balloon, it takes its wings and projects some of that vertical motion into horizontal motion and glides. In order to go forward, it has to go up and down – it’s always going up and down. We use the battery as a movable mass. We can move the battery forward and back on a lead screw. When we want it to go down, the battery slides forward, and when we want it to go up the battery slides back. To turn, we can slide the battery side to side. A little weight on the bottom of the battery causes it to bank and make a turn. We can give the glider a series of waypoints, and a compass inside keeps it on its heading. It will make its own adjustments in order to stay on its course to go where we want to take our measurements.”

By 2010, it was clear Seagliders were a worthy investment for the scientific community, but a desire to use them in the Arctic presented unique problems for Gobat to solve.

The first big obstacle was tackling the reliability of the Seaglider’s electronics and mechanical systems. Since recovery in an Arctic environment is more challenging than in the open ocean, every glider that would enter the water needed to be reliable enough to complete the mission.

Reliability is a big deal for us,” Gobat said. “We don’t just design something on paper or in the lab that theoretically should work, but we actually have to build it so it does. If the hydraulic pump leaks, it’s dead. If the battery doesn’t move back and forth like it’s supposed to, it’s dead. All the electronics have to work. If the satellite link doesn’t work, it’s dead because it can’t tell us where it is. If any connector leaks, you have problems. It’s the simple stuff, the basic stuff that we’ve been doing for years, but you have to do it right every time or you’re going to have problems. We’ve designed a lot of complex systems, and we have to get them to work and talk with one another reliably every time.”

In the open ocean, the gliders normally rely on GPS to navigate, which requires them to surface to the top of the water to acquire their position. When working under the ice, surfacing isn’t an option, so a new type of navigation was required. Gobat’s solution was to replace GPS with acoustic navigation.

Special moorings placed at varying locations throughout the region emit a series of audible tones that tell the gliders where they’re at under water.

Lastly, Gobat also had to re-write the software that drives the gliders. If there’s a failure, the normal protocol for the glider is to surface to the top of the water and phone home with a description of the issue. Pilots back at the lab in Seattle can then troubleshoot the issue and decide whether or not it can continue collecting data or if it needs to be recovered. However, when working under the ice, resurfacing simply isn’t an option.

If something goes wrong in the Arctic, we’re pretty dead,” Gobat said. “If a glider is able to find open water and make it to the surface, it will probably get iced in and get smashed, and that’ll be the end of it. So, there is a different set of recovery techniques coded into the glider – it has a different decision tree. We pre-decided what things we think we’re going to just fight through, and with others we know that if it’s broken, it’s broken. If a leak is detected on a sensor, for example, it will try to shut the sensor down instead of coming up to the surface to try to tell us that.”

The strategy paid off. By 2010, three Seagliders were used near Greenland, and in 2014, they were successfully deployed in the Arctic for the first time. Just this past January, another version of the system was deployed off Antarctica to go under the ice shelf, and the team has already begun collecting data.

In September, Gobat and a team of about 30 engineers and scientists deployed aboard the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy in support of a departmental research initiative for the Office of Naval Research. The project, led by friend and colleague Dr. Craig Lee, attempts to better understand how the Arctic ice, atmosphere and water interact. The project, known as stratified ocean dynamics in the Arctic, or SODA for short, relies on the deployment of a series of acoustic navigation buoys and six of Gobat’s Seagliders. Clocking in at about $125k a piece, each glider will spend the next year under the ice collecting and transmitting data back to Lee and other members of the team.

This is where all our work comes to fruition,” Gobat said. “There is a sense of professional reward there. It’s challenging. It’s stressful. You want the gliders to work. You put a lot of work into them, so you want to see it work out well.”

For now, his formula has been working, and it’s been working well, which is one of the reasons he was chosen to join the SODA team – a decision Lee called a no-brainer.

The man is a genius,” Lee said. “He’s insane at what he does. He always has a series of side projects going on in the lab. Some of them don’t have any relevance to the project we’re currently working on, but he has this sense to know what we’re going to need five years from now. For a project like this, he’s the guy you send when you can only send one guy.

After they spend a year in the water, the gliders will eventually be recovered by Gobat or members of his team. By the time analysts finally chew through the mountains of data they collect, Gobat will probably be working on the next version of glider to take the team into the next 10 years.

Source:maritime-executive

Ship to Shore Crane Blasted and Toppled

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A heavily corroded ship to shore crane was demolished last Sunday October 28 in a rare crane toppling event.

Usually a crane is taken apart piece by piece, but the port decided that to save time they wanted it toppled, which involved pre-cutting and wire ropes: large forklift trucks pulled at the wire ropes until the crane eventually fell.

The demolition of the 180-foot crane was undertaken by Global Rigging & Transport (GRT) and organized by SSA International (a stakeholder of the port in San Juan). Essential to any crane toppling is the creation of the drop zone (the area where the crane falls). The videos show the installation of gravel on the ground, strategically placed to cushion the fall and to reduce damage to the container yard.
 
GRT has a long history with the crane, as they have moved it three times. It fits in only three ports in the world. Built in 1981, over its 37 year history the crane is estimated to have lifted around four million containers.

Source:maritime-executive

Nearly Half of All 2018 Scheduled Deliveries Still at Yards

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There are 1,966 vessels which have deliveries dates scheduled for 2018. However only 1,100 have hit the water so far this year, meaning 44 percent of the 2018 orderbook is outstanding, according to VesselsValue.

Out of the three top shipbuilding countries, China still has 50 percent of their 2018 orders to deliver within the last two months of the year. Compared to Japan and South Korea, where 25 percent and 28 percent of their respective orderbooks is currently outstanding, Chinese yards could potentially slip 446 vessels into next year's delivery schedule.

Vessel deliveries typically slow down towards the end of the year. If shipowners wait a few weeks, allowing the delivery to slip into the new year, the vessel is considered a whole year younger.

Ship types with the highest number of outstanding 2018 scheduled deliveries include all offshore vessels types (mobile offshore drilling units (MODU) at 75 percent of 2018 vessels still to be delivered, offshore support vessels (OSVs) at 69 percent and offshore construction vessels at 67 percent) and the small dry sector at 54 percent.

In the years prior to the oil price crash, OSVs would typically make up 30-50 percent of U.S. deliveries. However, offshore support vessels made up a reduced proportion of U.S. deliveries with only 13 hitting the water in 2017 versuss 63 in 2014. While the slow down of deliveries is being experienced around the world, the U.S. company Edison Chouset is bucking the trend by taking delivery of 12 OSVs so far this year, with only on still in the schedule.

Source:maritime-executive

Ferry accident in Barcelona, whom to blame

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Ro-Pax Ferry EXCELLENT connecting port of Genoa, Barcelona and Tangier hit container terminal pier at around 0700 UTC Oct 31, while maneuvering in Barcelona port to dock, on arrival. Bad weather and stormy wind presumably, caused the accident. Maneuvering was strange, indeed.

Ferry approached her designated dock, then drifted back, turned and headed for port’s entrance. Probably, it was decided to abort berthing or wait for tugs, because it was too difficult to keep the ship under control. 

Ferry hit pier and literally, knocked down gantry crane. 6 containers on pier said to be crashed, sparks ignited flammable cargo inside container/containers. Fire was extinguished by city fire engines, ferry was taken under control and berthed. Reportedly she suffered strbd bow hull damages. 

Stormy weather alone can’t explain the accident, there was obviously, mishandling of the situation by maybe, both Master and Pilot.

Ferry accident in Barcelona, whom to blame

0

Ro-Pax Ferry EXCELLENT connecting port of Genoa, Barcelona and Tangier hit container terminal pier at around 0700 UTC Oct 31, while maneuvering in Barcelona port to dock, on arrival. Bad weather and stormy wind presumably, caused the accident. Maneuvering was strange, indeed.

Ferry approached her designated dock, then drifted back, turned and headed for port’s entrance. Probably, it was decided to abort berthing or wait for tugs, because it was too difficult to keep the ship under control. 

Ferry hit pier and literally, knocked down gantry crane. 6 containers on pier said to be crashed, sparks ignited flammable cargo inside container/containers. Fire was extinguished by city fire engines, ferry was taken under control and berthed. Reportedly she suffered strbd bow hull damages. 

Stormy weather alone can’t explain the accident, there was obviously, mishandling of the situation by maybe, both Master and Pilot.

The Royal Canadian Navy to receive a sixth Arctic and Offshore Patrol Ship

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As part of Strong, Secure, Engaged: Canada’s Defence Policy, the Government of Canada is acquiring the Arctic and Offshore Patrol Ships (AOPS) to bolster the Royal Canadian Navy’s capabilities while equipping its women and men with versatile and reliable vessels to complete their vital missions.

Today, the Honourable Harjit S. Sajjan, Minister of National Defence announced that the Royal Canadian Navy will receive a sixth patrol ship, which will help sustain hundreds of highly-skilled middle class jobs at Irving shipyards.

The Royal Canadian Navy needs a diversified fleet to respond to the challenges it faces today and will face well into the future. The AOPS will patrol Canada’s oceans, including the Arctic, and are perfectly suited for missions abroad to support international partners, humanitarian aid, disaster relief, search and rescue, and drug interdiction.

A sixth patrol ship will greatly increase the capacity of the Royal Canadian Navy to deploy AOPS simultaneously, at home or abroad. Additionally, a fleet of six AOPS will allow our frigates to focus on further tasks, allowing the RCN to use its fleet more effectively.

The Government of Canada is also committed to providing the best economic opportunities for Canadians. Through the National Shipbuilding Strategy, the Government of Canada is providing the Royal Canadian Navy with safe and effective vessels to carry out their missions, while providing meaningful economic opportunities for Canadians.

Trump signs billion dollar boost for Great Lakes shipping

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The Great Lakes shipping community received a huge boost in late October, with President Donald Trump signing a bill that would authorize close to $1bn for construction of a second lock allowing transits of large “Laker” vessels, at the Soo Locks in the north of Michigan at the eastern terminus of Lake Superior.

In the existing Soo configuration, the big vessels can transit using the aging Poe Lock which is paralleled by the smaller McArthur Lock. Trump signed into law "America's Water Infrastructure Act of 2018," part of which will go toward long-proposed improvements at the locks. The plan is to combine two of the oldest, smaller locks into another large lock to complement the Poe Lock.

The President, a champion of “infrastructure” projects, signed "America's Water Infrastructure Act of 2018" into law a part of which will go to the long discussed fix at the locks. The actual funding will still need to be allocated by Congress.

The Poe Lock has been critical to steel production in the United States. In actual tonnage, the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), which maintains the locks, said: “From 2007 to 2017, the Soo Locks complex accommodated more than 72.5 million tons on an average annual basis, including taconite pellets (57%), coal (21%)), grain (11%), aggregates (limestone) (6%), and other commodities (5%). In 2017, 89% of the total tonnage transiting the Soo Locks Complex passed through the Poe Lock.” Plans call for combining two smaller locks into a second larger (1,200 ft) lock that would parallel the aging Poe Lock (completed in 1968).

National security has loomed large in arguments in favor of building the new lock. The Soo provides a link between Lake Superior, closer to raw materials for steel production, and the other Lakes, closer to the steel mills.

A report from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) concluded that an unplanned outage, lasting for six months, at the Poe Lock could lead to a severe recession – with US steelmaking curtailed. Supply chain impacts would lead to near shutdown across critical supply chains, the report said.

A 2017 report by infrastructure giant Aecom, commissioned by the US Treasury as part of the “Build America First” initiative, pegged the al- important “benefit to cost ratio” at a healthy 2.0x to 4.0x. The project is expected to take seven years- subject, of course, to the highly fickle (and sometimes partisan) Congressional budgeting process. This bill did have broad bi-partisan support.

Source:seatrade-maritime

BIMCO: US soya bean exports to China down 97%

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The trade war and particularly the Chinese tariffs on imports of U.S. soya beans can now clearly be seen with the start of the soya bean peak exporting period in the U.S. In the first eight weeks of the 2018/19 marketing year accumulated U.S. exports are down 39%, from 12.2 million tonnes on 26 October 2017 to 7.5 million tonnes on 25 October 2018.

While weekly exports this season have been consistently lower than last season, the week to 18 October marked the single biggest decrease, from 2.5 million tonnes in the corresponding week last year, to just 1.1 million tonnes. This represents a 56% reduction. The week to 25 October confirmed the downward trend.

In addition to the fall in total exports harming the shipping industry, an increasing proportion of the demand comes from destinations closer to the US, further lowering the overall tonne-mile demand. BIMCO’s Chief Shipping Analyst said.

While in the first eight weeks of last marketing year China accounted for 70% of total US soya bean exports, the trade war has led to the Chinese taking just 4% of exports this marketing year. The US has seen a 97% decrease in the amount of soya beans it sends to China, from 8.5 million tonnes in the first eight weeks of last season, to just 201,700 tonnes in the same period this year.

The driving force behind the lower exports is the drop in Chinese demand. In the first eight weeks of last year, exports of US soya beans to China averaged a million tonnes a week. This year soya beans have only been sent to China in three of the eight weeks.” Peter Sand said.

Mexico is now largest importer So far this season the biggest importer of US soya beans has been Mexico at 785,400 tonnes, an increase of 34% compared to last year. Unlike Mexico the rest of the top four importers of US soya beans this season have at least doubled their imports. Spain comes in second at 602,800 tonnes, a 153% increase compared to last year. Argentina is up to 508,100 tonnes having not imported any US soya beans at this time last season. Egypt takes the final top four spot, going from no imports in the first eight weeks last season to 486,700 tonnes this year.

Iran was number buyer in August Iran was the top imported of US soya beans in August, and has so far in the 2018/19 season, which started in September, been the sixth biggest importer of US soya beans, importing 400,400 tonnes, up from nothing in the same period last year.

Source:marinelink

ERSG builds Borssele 1&2 team

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UK energy industry recruitment outfit ERSG has been selected by Orsted to supply temporary staff for the developer's 752MW Borssele 1&2 offshore wind farm complex off the Dutch coast.

ERSG said it was one of five companies chosen following a tender to deliver staff to the Orsted project.

The contract will run until 2021 and with over 200 positions onshore and offshore to be filled, the recruiter said.

It added that the deal makes it the only company to have supply agreements with the Danish utility for projects in the UK, Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands.

ERSG Orsted global account manager Oliver White said “It’s fantastic news for ERSG. We are delighted to have been chosen to continue our flourishing relationship with the world’s largest offshore wind farm developer.”

Source:renews