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Novatek Ships First Yamal LNG to Brazil

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Russia's Novatek has shipped its first LNG cargo to Brazil: the LNG was produced from the Yamal LNG project. The cargo was delivered to the Bahia Regasification Terminal owned by Petrobras.

Leonid Mikhelson, Novatek’s Chairman of the Management Board, said the shipment confirms the viability of our logistical model and unique geographical location of the Yamal LNG project to deliver competitively priced LNG to any part of the world.

The second Yamal LNG train commenced operation in August, the first in December 2017. The second LNG train is now operating at its rated nameplate capacity of 5.5 million tons per annum (mmpta). The total capacity of the two working LNG trains is 11 mmpta. Two more trains are expected to be commissioned over the next two years. The project is 50.1 percent owned by Novatek, with Total having a 20 percent share, CNPC having a 20 percent share and Silk Road Fund having a 9.9 percent share.

Novatek is building a new Arctic LNG transshipment hub, the Bechevinka terminal, located in the far east at Kamchatka. It will cost up to $1.5 billion and have a capacity of up to 20 million tons of LNG per year. The terminal will be a key logistics hub for the Yamal LNG project as well as future Arctic LNG production projects. From there LNG will be transferred from special ice-class carriers to conventional vessels before heading to Asia-Pacific customers.

Last year, Novatek signed agreements with Chinese National Petroleum Company (CNPC) and China Development Bank for the Arctic LNG 2 project. Construction is expected to begin in 2019, the first of three trains operational by 2023. As with Yamal, natural gas will be exported via the Northern Sea Route. Recent drilling has led to the discovery of more gas in the region, and the Arctic LNG 2 project now contains an estimated two trillion cubic meters of gas.

Source:maritime-executive

IMO Encourages Maritime Transport Strategy Development

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The IMO is encouraging countries to develop a maritime transport strategy, highlighting that maritime transport is a central part of the “blue economy” which has enormous potential to promote economic growth and improve peoples’ lives while addressing many of the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals.

A newly launched video explains what a national maritime transport policy is and how it can give a country the tools it needs to become an effective participant in the maritime sector. Through its Integrated Technical Cooperation Programme, the IMO organizes activities to assist countries develop their policies. In conjunction with the World Maritime University, it has developed a training package for government officials and other senior personnel, which is being rolled out globally, along with the video.

The Sustainable Development Goals are a blueprint for a better and more sustainable future for all. They address global challenges including those related to poverty, inequality, climate, environmental degradation, prosperity, and peace and justice. The Goals are hoped to be achieved by 2030.

Source:maritime-executive

Port of Bergen to build Europe’s largest onshore power supply

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Port of Bergen will build Europe’s largest onshore power supply in Norway’s largest cruise port. The aim is for the facility to be ready at the beginning of the cruise season in 2020.

The shore power facility will be able to supply three cruise vessels with power simultaneously. The aim is for the facility to be ready at the beginning of the cruise season in 2020. In addition, a more limited facility that will serve one cruise vessel at a time will be ready by 2019. Now, vessels that dock at Port of Bergen emit large quantities of particles, NOX and CO2.

The shore power facility is estimated to cost around 120 million NOK. Port of Bergen will apply for funding for about 50 million NOK from Enova, a state owned grant scheme, as investment support. The remaining will be paid for by Port of Bergen and BKK. However, over time the industry itself will ultimately pay for the cost of establishing shore power.

Port Director Johnny Breivik stated:"The aim is for all vessels that dock at Port of Bergen to use renewable energy. For this to be a reality one has to make sure that shore power is the preferred alternative by the cruise lines."=

Source:safety4sea

US reveals strategy to improve cyber security

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US's President Donald Trump signed America's National Cyber Strategy. This strategy states that it will use all available means to keep America safe from cyber threats, while it mentions that cyber security in the maritime sector is of particular concern.

Mr. Trump said that the costs of malicious cyber activity cannot be ignored.

Guided by this National Cyber Strategy, the Federal Government will be better equipped to protect the American people, the American homeland, and the American way of life.

As for the maritime sector, it has modernized and it has become more vulnerable to cyber exploitation or attack. So, maritime security is of 'particular concern because lost or delayed shipments can result in strategic economic disruptions and potential spillover effects on downstream industries'. 

Maritime transportation is crucial to the US and global economy and America will attempt to clarify maritime cyber security roles and responsibilities; promote mechanisms for international coordination and information sharing; and boost the development of next-generation cyber-resilient maritime infrastructure.

America’s economic and national security is built on global trade and transportation. Our ability to guarantee free and timely movement of goods, open sea and air lines of communications, access to oil and natural gas, and availability of associated critical infrastructures is vital to our economic and national security.

You can see US's National Cyber Strategy in the following PDF ( Open

Source:safety4sea

 

Panama unflags last migrant rescue ship in central Mediterranean

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The Panama Maritime Authority has revoked the registration of the search and rescue ship 'Aquarius 2', the one remaining charity rescue vessel still operating in the central Mediterranean Sea. This means that there will be no charity rescue ships off the Libyan coast in the near future, unless the vessel can find a new flag to sail under.

The vessel is currently underway with 58 survivors onboard, but the decision by the Panama Authority (PMA) means that once the ship comes into port it will be unflagged and will not be allowed to operate again unless it can find a new flag, Reuters reported.

In an official statement through social media, SOS Mediterranee, one of the charities that operates the Aquarius, said that the Italian Government pressures Panama to stop the ship's rescues 'on world’s deadliest maritime route' and demanded that European governments allow the Aquarius to continue its mission.

Italy’s Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said the Italian government had applied no pressure on Panama.

Italian government has closed its ports to humanitarian ships that rescue migrants off Libya, and is not accepting migrants sent back from the German border. Namely, charity rescue vessels with foreign flags will not be allowed in Italian ports. Salvini has also led a popular crackdown against immigration since his League party and the anti-establishment 5 Star Movement took office in June.

On the occasion, he said on Sunday that Aquarius 2 had hindered the work of the Libyan coast guard, ignoring instructions and the revoke of the registration because the ship acts illegally.

Italy has previously attacked the EU for its lack of support on immigration and has threatened to refuse to back the bloc’s multi-year budget.

Source:safety4sea

CMA CGM say sulphur cap to cost an additional $160 per teu

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Container line CMA CGM says the 0.5% sulphur cap in 2020 will cost an additional average of $160 per teu, and will be charged to customers through fuel charges.

Although CMA CGM has led the way with the order for nine 22,000 teu LNG-powered newbuilds it plans to primarily comply with the cap 1 January 2020 through the use of low sulphur fuels. It added that it would be ordering scrubbers for “several ships”.

Based on current conditions the world's third largest container line said that it would result in additional costs of $160 per teu on average.

"The implementation of this new regulation, which represents a major environmental advance for our sector, will affect all players in the shipping industry. In line with its commitments, the Group will comply with the regulation issued by the IMO as from 1 January 2020. In this context, we will inevitably have to review our sales policy regarding fuel surcharges," said Mathieu Friedberg, senior vice president Commercial Agencies Network.

The additional costs would be passed on to customers through the application or adjustment to fuel surcharges on trade-by-trade basis.

Last week Maersk Line announced plans for a new bunker adjustment factor from 1 January 2019 to pass on the additional costs of the sulphur cap, which has drawn the ire of shippers and forwarders.

However, it looks likely most lines will try and pass on the additional cost to customers and senior officials from Ocean Network Express, Orient Overseas Container Line (OOCL) and APL, a unit of CMA CGM, said shippers would have to pay.

Source:seatrade-maritime

CWind on cable hotline for Vattenfall

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CWind has signed a five-year framework agreement with Vattenfall for cable repairs across the developer's European offshore wind farm portfolio.

The framework covers emergency repair, fault-finding and diving operations, CWind said.

The Global Marine-owned company will handle repairs from its offshore service hub at the Northumberland Port of Blyth.

Cable-lay barge ASV Pioneer (pictured) will carry out the majority of works and has been pre-mobilised to hold a stock of universal power joints for tackling repairs.

CWind director of power cables Andrew Llyod said the pre-mobilized vessel will help reduce the time needed to complete a repair job from the current industry-average of 100 days.

"We are able to respond rapidly to incidents and reduce operational downtime by up to 60%, potentially improving repair speeds to just 40 days," he said.

Vattenfall marine projects operations manager Kerstin Wessel said: "CWind will play an important and critical role in ensuring that we are prepared and able to respond quickly to power cable faults offshore should they arise."

Source:renews

Simec Atlantis extends half-year losses

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Edinburgh tidal developer Simec Atlantis Energy recorded a half-yearly loss of over £9m up to the end of June 2018.

The £9.1m loss were almost triple that of the 2017 half-year deficit of £3.2m.

Atlantis said the extended losses reflect the investment made to reposition it for growth as well as the transition of its 6MW MeyGen Phase 1A tidal array in the Pentland Firth into its 25-year commercial operating phase.

Revenue for the half-year was £1.3m, mainly driven by MeyGen operations, compared to nil in 2017.

The MeyGen project has now exported more than 8GWh of predictable, clean energy to the grid,” said chief executive Tim Cornelius.

We will be returning the two Andritz turbines to service in the fourth quarter on MeyGen Phase 1A post their inspection, repair and maintenance period and we look forward to a very productive winter,” he added.

Atlantis said its flagship 220MW coal to waste-to-energy conversion project at Uskmouth in Wales is on track to achieve first power generation in 2020.

Source:renews

Arkona delivers first power

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Eon and Equinor have delivered electricity to the German grid for the first time from the 385MW Arkona offshore wind farm in the Baltic Sea.

Equinor head of new energy development and chairman of the Arkona steering committee Pal Coldevin said: “First power in the Arkona wind project represents a milestone in the market of renewable energy and we are proud to participate together with Eon and the transmission system operator 50Hertz.”

Eon Climate & Renewables chief operating office Sven Utermohlen said: “It only took one year from the first monopile installation to the first electricity feed-in. Rarely before has a project been built so straightforwardly.”

This is a great achievement on the part of our team and all our project partners and at the same time an important step towards further optimization of offshore wind projects.”

GeoSea jack-up A2Sea Sea Challenger has installed 44 of the 60 Siemens Gamesa 6.45MW turbines at the project, Equinor said.

Equinor was formerly known as Statoil.

Source:renews

Why China buying up ports is worrying Europe

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There is rising concern about whether China will use its commercial acquisitions of overseas ports for military purposes, under its drive to put civilian technology and resources to military use.

Under its trillion-dollar “Belt and Road Initiative” – a blueprint announced in 2013 to boost trade and connectivity in Asia, Africa, Europe and beyond – China has significantly increased its global investments, particularly in maritime infrastructure.

Pioneering Chinese companies such as Cosco Shipping Ports and China Merchants Port Holdings are on a march to acquire shares or sign deals to build terminals at seaports overseas.

Cosco began operating a container port in Piraeus in Greece in 2008, when the Greek government was near bankruptcy. Beijing has since become a big player in the European port business.

China has gained a foothold in Europe’s three largest ports: respectively Euromax in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, of which it owns 35 per cent; Antwerp in Belgium, in which it holds a 20 per cent stake; and Hamburg, Germany, where it is to build a new terminal.

A flood of Chinese investment helped to rejuvenate some of these ports. In Piraeus, for example, Chinese investment in 2016 led to increased trade: Piraeus was ranked seventh in Europe in 2017 by container throughput – up from eighth the year before – and recorded a 92 per cent increase in pre-tax profits.

China’s Djibouti military base: ‘logistics facility’, or platform for geopolitical ambitions overseas?
But it is not always smooth sailing when Beijing reaches out to ports overseas with its deep pockets.

In Israel, China is building two new ports, in Haifa and Ashdod. Local academics have urged the Israeli government to assess how much China can be involved in its economy without compromising its security interests.

Those who believe Israel should conduct a national security review of the Chinese contract include Shaul Chorev, a reservist brigadier general with the Israel Defence Forces, former Israeli navy chief of staff and chairman of the country’s Atomic Energy Commission.

China’s leaders increasingly seek to leverage China’s growing economic, diplomatic and military clout to establish regional superiority and expand the country’s international influence,” Chorev said.

The ‘Belt and Road Initiative’ is intended to develop strong economic ties with other countries, shape their interests to align with China’s, and deter confrontation or criticism of China’s approach to sensitive issues.

There are increasing worries in the EU that China may use its involvement in European ports to exert political influence in individual member states, according to Frans-Paul van der Putten, a senior research fellow from Netherlands Institute of International Relations.

China’s rapid advance into the European port sector has already created a backlash,” Van der Putten said. “It is one of the reasons European governments are increasingly suspicious of China’s economic influence, and why an EU-wide framework for foreign investment screening is being discussed.”

China’s port operation also triggered a backlash from the United States, because it threatened information and cybersecurity there, Gary Roughead, a former US chief of naval operations, said at a recent workshop organised by Israel’s University of Haifa and the Hudson Institute, a conservative US think tank.

Chinese port operators will be able to monitor US ship movements closely, be aware of maintenance activities, have access to equipment moving to and from repair sites and interact freely with our crews over protracted periods,” Roughead said.

Chorev said China’s “integration of military for civilian use” – an approach introduced by President Xi Jinping after he took office in 2013 – had sparked fears about the security implications of China’s overseas port development.

China has embarked on an ambitious drive, modelling the US, to combine defence and civilian industries in the hope of them benefiting each other. It aims to make use of civilian technology and resources for military use to accelerate the modernisation of its army.

This could include drone technology, artificial intelligence and the Beidou navigation system, China’s answer to the US-developed Global Positioning System, which is expected to be ready in 2020 and will be used for both military and civilian purposes.

Military-civilian integration is among the goals China set out in its 13th five-year plan for 2016-20. Xi set up a new committee last year to champion integration of civilian and military investment in technology.

The Chinese military is also extending its presence abroad. It has established a military base in Djibouti, and is expected to establish one in Gwadar Port in Pakistan.

Zhang Jie, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, wrote in an article in 2015 about the concept of “first civilian, later military”, in which commercial ports would be built with the goal of slowly being developed into “strategic support points” that could “assist China in defending maritime channel security and [control] key waterways”.

Port investments are vehicles through which China can cultivate political influence, constrain recipient countries and build infrastructure meant for military as well as civilian use to facilitate Beijing’s long-range naval operations, according to a report by the Centre for Advanced Defence Studies, a Washington-based think tank.

Van der Putten said the Chinese government would have to be careful to avoid creating the impression that its commercial port investments in Europe were linked to military purposes, in order not to antagonise European countries.

But Neil Davidson, a senior analyst of ports and terminals at Drewry, a London-based maritime research consultancy, said some of the ports, especially those in Europe, were still owned by non-Chinese entities.

It also makes good business sense for Chinese players to acquire overseas port assets,” he said. “I don’t think European countries feel threatened, because in almost all cases the landlord function remains in the hands of the local countries.

Source:hellenicshippingnews