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ICTSI expanding flagship Manila terminal

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International Container Terminal Services Inc (ICTSI) is expanding its flagship Manila International Container Terminal (MICT) in the Philippines capital.

The terminal operator is set to start the construction of berths 7 and 8 at MICT on 15 October. In a second phase slated for 19 February 2019, pending final approvals, ICTSI will start working building the full back-up areas for future berths 9 and 10 at the Manila terminal.

The new berths will have a draught of 13.5 m to 14.5 m allowing the terminal to cater to larger boxships and the increased volumes they bring. The terminal will take delivery of 16 rubber-tyred gantry cranes next year and two super post-panamax quay cranes.

Christian R. Gonzalez, ICTSI global corporate head: “On top of our commitments, the construction of these berths is our response to the need for an increase in capacity and increased productivity over the longer term.

We also need to accommodate system changes, such as the steady increase in vessel size, the consolidation of major shipping players, and the introduction of rail services.

ICTSI has allocated capex of over $380m in 2018 including the expansion of MICT.

Source:seatrade-maritime

French launch Orsted SOV

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French marine transport company Louis Dreyfus Armateurs Group has launched its first service operation vessel for Orsted for the maintenance of offshore wind farms.

The launch of the vessel, named Wind of Change, took place at the Cemre shipyard in Turkey, where the final construction phase has now started.

Final delivery is expected early next year. Orsted will use Wind of Change for work on the Borkum Riffgrund 1 & 2 and Gode Wind 1 & 2 offshore wind farms off the coast of Germany.

The vessel's overall length is 83 metres with a breadth of 19.40 metres. It has capacity for 90 people, including more than 60 wind farm technicians.

This launch marks a new stage in the group’s double partnership with Orsted, which has also ordered a second SOV to be delivered in 2021.

Source:renews

Wave investors back slice of Danish

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Danish company Resen Waves has raised more than £1m to step up commercial development of its technology for offshore oil & gas and docking systems for underwater drones.

The company raised £1.3m through UK private equity outfit West Hill Capital to progress its Resen Waves Power Buoy.

The Danish developer is eyeing an additional £1.2m capital raise to accelerate international commercial growth of its small-scale generator.

Our initial target market is the $6bn offshore oil & gas decommissioning industry and underwater docking solutions for Autonomous Under Vehicles,” said Resen Waves chief executive Per Resen Steenstrup.

We make it possible to power and communicate in real time with instruments, AUV docking stations and machinery on the sea bed and our clients can control the activity from their office in real-time.

The company is working towards a utility-scale device that could eventually replace diesel generators in off-grid coastal communities.

Source:renews

Hapag-Lloyd converting one LNG-ready containership, and fitting scrubbers to two

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Hapag-Lloyd is to convert one of the LNG-ready containerships it acquired in the UASC merger, and fit scrubbers on two vessels as it analyses options apart from low sulphur fuel for complying with the IMO's 2020 sulphur cap.

Joining many other container lines in announcing a fuel recovery charge for additional expense of using compliant fuel to meet the demands of the 0.5% low sulphur cap for marine fuel from 1 January 2020 Hapag-Lloyd is also taking its first step in potentially using LNG as a marine fuel.

Furthermore, Hapag-Lloyd is thoroughly analysing other technological options for the reduction of emissions that might be able to cover a small share of a fleet. This is why trials with a LNG conversion of one ship as well as Exhaust Gas Cleaning Systems (EGCS) on two others will be conducted in the year 2019,” the company said in a statement.

Hapag-Lloyd acquired a total of 17 LNG-ready containerships when it merged with UASC. The 15,000 teu and 18,800 teu vessels delivered between 2014 and 2016 were seen at the time as acting as a catalyst for the use of LNG as marine fuel, with the Middle East based line exploring LNG fueling options with Qatar and Shell.

However, with the takeover of by Hapag-Lloyd there had been, until now, no movement on converting any of the 17 vessels to run on LNG. In the meantime CMA CGM has become the standard bearer for LNG as a marine fuel in the container sector ordering nine 22,000 teu LNG-powered newbuildings.

With just one LNG-powered vessel and two fitted with scrubbers Hapag-Lloyd is set to primarily comply with the sulphur cap for its fleet of 226 containerships through the use of low sulphur fuels.

Source:seatrade-maritime

More delay for Kriegers link

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Transmission system operators Energinet and 50Hertz have postponed the commissioning of the 400MW Kriegers Flak Combined Grid Solution between Germany and Denmark until May 2019.

Construction work at the conversion station has been delayed mainly because of delays completing the onshore converter station near Rostock, Danish grid operator Energinet said. The TSOs blamed the German labour market for the delay.

The commissioning of the 400MW grid link had already been delayed once to the first quarter of 2019. Commissioning has been due by the end of 2018.

In July, two offshore cables were installed for the Kriegers Flak CGS. The cables connect the platform of the Danish 605MW Kriegers Flak project with the platform of EnBW’s 288MW Baltic 2 offshore wind farm in German waters, which has been in operation since 2015.

Once operational, the CGS will connect the grids in the Danish region of Sjaelland with Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania in Germany.

Source:Renews

UK secures funding for hydrogen injection system on ferry

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Innovate UK have awarded £430,332 to design and integrate a hydrogen diesel dual fuel injection system onboard a commercial ferry. The hydrogen that will be used in the project HyDIME (Hydrogen Diesel Injection in a Marine Environment), will power a ferry operating between the main town of Kirkwall and the island of Shapinsay.

The hydrogen will be produced by the European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) in Orkney, from clean renewable energy sources available on the islands.

The 12-month HyDIME project started on 1st August 2018 and will attempt to support future hydrogen marine projects and contribute to reducing emissions within the maritime industry.

Led by Ferguson Marine Engineering Limited, the project will be executed by Orkney Islands Council, High Speed Sustainable Manufacturing Institute (HSSMI), the European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC), and Lloyds Register. The project will apply a unique technology in hydrogen dual fuel.

HyDIME aims to prove the use of hydrogen/diesel injection technology in the marine industry and it aspires to result in UK’s first hydrogen injection system on this type of vessel.

HSSMI will carry out a scale-up analysis and carry out a techno-economic assessment of the current system and of potential future scenarios. The aim is to find out if there are any other regions of the UK where similar hydrogen infrastructure could be used.

"With the need to reduce harmful emissions, using hydrogen as a fuel is becoming increasingly popular as an alternative to fossil fuels. Hydrogen/diesel injection technology is already being demonstrated within the automotive industry and can significantly reduce harmful emissions". EMEC mentioned.

Source:safety4sea

First Ship-to-Ship LNG Bunkering at Rotterdam

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Shell has achieved the Port of Rotterdam's first ship-to-ship LNG bunkering operation using the specialized LNG bunker vessel, Cardissa

She refueled the Sovcomflot vessel Gagarin Prospect, the world’s first LNG-powered Aframax tanker, delivered from Hyundai Heavy Industries in July. The vessel's two-stroke, 7X62DF main engine was manufactured under license from Winterthur Gas & Diesel (WinGD) by Hyundai Heavy Industries.

The ice class 1A tanker entered into a Shell multi-year time charter in July 2018. A sister ship, Samuel Prospect, is scheduled for delivery into Shell time charter next year. The vessels are part of a series of six Sovcomflot tankers currently under construction at Hyundai Heavy Industries and due for delivery between the third quarter of this year and the first quarter of 2019.

The two ice-class tankers will be on time charter to Shell for up to 10 years, with a minimum commitment of five years. The 114,000dwt tankers will operate on Shell’s global freight trading network. The ships’ 1A ice classification allows them to transit the Northern Sea Route and trade in harsh winter conditions.

The vessels are designed to be eligible for Rotterdam's six percent green award discount and 20 percent environmental ship index discount. On a port charge of €75,000 (about $88,500) for an aframax tanker, the discounts in Rotterdam amounts to €8,500. In Antwerp in Belgium, the discount on harbor dues would be €7,000 from a €105,000 port call charge. In Sweden, Gothenburg provides discounts of nearly €8,000 on a charge of about €82,000, while at Brofjorden the discount is €9,600 on €68,000.

Russian ports are also offering discounts on harbor fees which amount to a €9,000 saving on a €105,000 port call charge.

The fueling of the Gagarin Prospect with LNG is the first operation under the LNG fuel supply agreement between Shell and Sovcomflot signed in 2017. Cardissa, delivered in 2017, can hold around 6,500 cubic meters of LNG fuel. The vessel’s seagoing capability enables Shell to serve customers with LNG fuel in locations throughout Europe.

Shell will also supply LNG to the world’s first LNG-powered cruise ships in 2019 following an agreement with Carnival Corporation. 

Source:maritime-executive

The Ocean Cleanup Trial Success

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The NGO The Ocean Cleanup has released video footage of its System 001's Pacific trials.

Tests conducted with the help of a Maersk Supply Service offshore tug were successful, fulfilling key requirements for the 600-meter snake-shaped system, like its u-shaped formation; its speed through the water; its ability to reorient itself when wind and wave directions change; and its resistance to damage in the harsh Pacific Ocean environment. 

There has never been a cleanup system of this magnitude deployed in the ocean,” said Founder and CEO Boyan Slat. “Therefore, continual testing is integral to our design process. We first had to learn as much as we could through scale model testing, North Sea prototypes, and computer modeling, but, because of the size and nature of our project, some things must be thrown into the deep end of the water, or the Pacific.”

There was no significant damage recorded during the test. The system is intact, and all major components are still functioning. The skirt, however, did incur some damage. It was observed upon arrival to the Pacific Trials destination, that there were two tears in the material above one of the ballast weights. It was concluded that this is likely resulting from the safety line connection when the screen was hoisted in the Seaplane Lagoon. Repair has not been possible due to the placement and accessibility, but, neither tear worsened during the trial period. 

The System 001 is now expected to be towed to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. The journey will take up to three weeks.

Source:maritime-executive

Cyber threats in the maritime environment: What you should know

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Passwords update; data speed; geo-location authentication; only a few ways to prevent the threat posed by cyber criminals who aim to undermine our network connections. Certainly, we're exploring the opposite end of the spectrum: always trying to protect against them.

How can, therefore, these threats affect industries and organizations, especially those in the maritime environment?

Cyber threat explained

The UK National Cyber Security Center describes cyber security as: "The protection of devices, services and networks – and the information on them – from theft or damage."

Accordingly, 'cyber-attack' is any malicious attempt to damage, disrupt or gain unauthorized access to computer systems, networks or devices, via cyber means, while 'cyber incident' is a breach of the security rules for a system or service – most commonly.

October marks the National Cybersecurity Awareness Month. Ensuring the cybersecurity of organization information systems, information technology, and operational technology requires constant vigilance and careful use.

Major cyber threats

  • Phishing

The US Coast Guard presents phishing among the major cyber threats; the fraudulent attempt to obtain sensitive information; such as usernames, passwords and credit card details, for malicious reasons. Organizations are urged to improve resilience against phishing, whilst minimizing disruption to user productivity. Typical defenses against phishing are reliant on users' abilities to detect phishing emails.

  • Ransomware

A ransomware usually revolves around obtaining money to restore the locked down data of the victim. In other words, it is a cryptographic code, which is written to lock down the files. It is just like any other computer code written by developers based on a simple cryptographic algorithm. Therefore, to write a complex ransomware code, authors and cyber-extortionists must have very good knowledge of computer language and code writing.

  • Insider threat

This threat refers to any malicious threat to an organization originating from a person within the organization itself. This could manifest itself in fraud, theft of information, or damage to internal systems.

"Individuals should make sure that they lock their workstations when they leave their desks and never share passwords with anyone,"..the US Coast Guard informs

  • Social Media deception

Cyber criminals use social media to engage in identity theft and attract individuals to download malicious code or even reveal their secure codes. Social media settings can determine who can access our information and secure them to the greatest extent possible!

Research says that from 2016 to 2017, there has been a 2,502% increase in the sale of ransomware on the dark web while cyber-criminal economy has hit global revenues of $1.5 trillion a year, the FBI has said. Profit; that’s the incentive behind cyber-crime!

 

Actions to be taken by shipping operators

  • Stick to the industry guidelines on maritime cybersecurity practices and their implementation
  • Use strong passwords and update them frequently
  • Be aware of your systems and the way they interact with each other
  • Implement risk assessment procedures properly

A messaging campaign to raise awareness

The global marine and offshore industry initiative, Be Cyber Aware at Sea aims to raise awareness, inform and educate owners, operators and on-board crews in order to ensure they are doing everything they can to mitigate this unknown threat at sea.

SAFETY4SEA supports the campaign which provides free resources such as downloadable posters, 'Phish & Ships' newsletter, a video blog each month with guest interviewees, 'Shark Bytes' and useful daily updates via all social media channels. The initiative received the 2018 SMART4SEA Training Award, sponsored by Navarino, for uniting industry stakeholders to raise awareness towards cyber security.

Source:safety4sea

India: Govt set to dump direct port delivery scheme

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The direct port delivery (DPD) scheme that was introduced as a panacea to cut cargo dwell time and costs is set to be dumped, with the government working on a plan to restore the role of container freight stations (CFS) in the evacuation system, a top ministry official said on Friday.

DPD scheme, which was implemented by the government last year with great vigour to promote the ease of doing business and improve India’s ranking in the logistics performance index of the World Bank, had started to hurt the business of CFSs servicing Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust.

Some of the CFSs, including listed entities, have started shedding staff to deal with the decline in business with one of them even shutting shop last week following an attack on buses carrying employees by a group that were retrenched.

DPD essentially means import containers are delivered directly to pre-approved clients at the port itself instead of waiting in a CFS located outside for clearance, which reduces the cargo dwell time and cost for shippers.

We are now trying to re-model our cargo evacuation system placing the CFS as the fulcrum of the entire planning,” Shipping Secretary Gopal Krishna said at the annual day of the Container Freight Stations Association of India. “We are going back to the thinking that was prevalent in the late 1980s when this concept started that CFSs should take the burden of being the first recipient of the boxes and thereafter cargo will move,” he stated.

The plan now is that within 24 hours, a container should move out of the port to a CFS, and as much less regulatory processes should be done in the port as possible. Regulatory and all other processes such as bundling, unbundling and re-positioning of cargo should happen where it was originally meant to be done, that is the CFSs. We had initial discussions with the all the stakeholders in the last ten days, including the shipping lines, shipping agents, forwarders and terminals. There is largely a unanimity that this seems to be the best possible way forward if we have to control the dwell time for exports and imports but largely for imports,” he said.

The challenge, though, is to address the issue of congestion and this can only be done by limiting the number of truck trailers that enter and exit the port.

Here, there is a possibility of utilising technology by creating a truck trailer market place. Currently, trailers coming from factories carrying export containers to the port goes back empty. So, the idea is that when it comes in, that should be the trailer which should carry back a box to the CFS so that unnecessary movement of trucks doesn’t take place in the port area. That should be the key if large number of containers have to be handled at the port. That will improve the capacity utilisation of the terminals – if the cargo gets moved out of the port limits within 24 hours, the terminals will be able to bring in more ships, they will be able to unload more cargo and load more cargo. Across the stake holder community, everyone feels that there is some bit of benefit for them from this plan,” he said.

The only issue that the government is grappling with, according to Gopal Krishna, is about the liability. “Because, we have trucks coming from far off places carrying export boxes and if we ask the same transporter to carry an import box to the nearest CFS or identified CFS, the issue of liability comes in. So, that’s the single point of challenge that we are now starting to address and I’m sure we’ll be able to address that in the next week or so,” he said.

“If this plan meets the regulatory requirements of the system, then I think we would have probably reached an ideal situation in which cargo gets evacuated from the ports within a very short time,” he noted.

There was a time when there was a bit of uncertainty in the minds of the CFSs, whether to change the business model (due to DPD) and what will happen to employment. I think, that should get sorted out by what we are now trying to attempt. So, I want to re-assure the CFSs operators that we will try to see that their utility in the system does not diminish, their utility in the system increases, their business grows and they become a very integral part of the system and remain so,” he said.

The rationale behind the introduction of DPD was to hasten the evacuation of cargo from the port, directly to the factories.

While that seems to be very much a goal that we should aspire for and we also set targets and raised the target for DPD from 40 per cent to 80 per cent, we found after a few months that it was stuck at 40 per cent. And then, when we were again trying to figure out and trying to dissect this number, we found that actually what gets transported directly to the end user is only about 10 per cent, the balance 30 per cent continue to be routed through CFSs,” the secretary said.

The ever-increasing ship sizes was one of the “biggest disruptors” of the maritime sector. When the ship size keeps on increasing, the cargo volume will keep on increasing and the on-shore logistics sector will only be “reactive” to what the off-shore logistics sector will continue to do. This will increase challenges on evacuation of cargo from the on-shore side. “It was then we started re-assessing our thinking, that can we re-think the role and use of CFSs,” Gopal Krishna said.

Initially, JNPT was also trying to take on the burden of transporting cargo containers out of the port; it had even finalised a transport solution which was touted as an innovative model that the port can adopt to quickly evacuate containers to the factories.

But, that is not the core function of the port. The core function of the port is to quickly unload cargo from the ship and take it out of its precincts as early as possible. And there was a model where we had CFSs in 34 locations which were so easily reachable from where the cargo could be distributed. Thereafter, the ports role end and the regulatory processes of Customs clearance and other things will take over. We thought that this was the time to re-think and consider reverting to the old concept of evacuating containers through CFSs,” he added.

Source:hellenicshippingnews