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Australia’s Antarctic Icebreaker Afloat

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Australia’s new Antarctic icebreaker, RSV Nuyina, was floated in wet dock on Saturday at Damen Shipyards in Romania.

It took two days to pump enough water from the nearby river into the docks, raising the water level six meters (20 feet) and floating the 10,751 ton ship about 30 centimeters above the dock floor. The ship is 25.6 meters (84 feet) wide and the dry dock is 35 meters (115 feet) wide. There’s about 10 meters (33 feet) of water in the wet dock, which will be enough to support the 16,000 ton weight of the ship when she’s completed.

Construction on the ship has reached deck four (the science deck), and the engines, generators, shaftlines, propellers and rudders are all in place. A number of steel blocks that will form the superstructure have already been constructed and are ready to be lifted onto the ship in the wet dock.

When complete the ship will rise to 10 decks, at navigation bridge level, measuring 50.2 meters (165 feet) from the keel to the top of the weather radar on the main mast.

RSV Nuyina, is due to arrive in Hobart in 2020 and make her maiden voyage to Antarctica in 2020-21. The ship will be the main lifeline to Australia’s three Antarctic research stations and its sub-Antarctic station on Macquarie Island and will support Australia’s leadership role in Antarctic and Southern Ocean scientific research. The ship is designed to be flexible enough to cope with future research and operational demands during her expected 30 year lifetime.

The RSV Nuyina is the only ship in the world to have a watertight room or ‘wet well’ to process seawater for krill and other fragile marine organisms, at up to 1,800 liters per minute. Other state-of-the-art scientific equipment includes acoustic instruments to map and visualize the sea floor and organisms in the water column, and instruments to measure atmospheric gases, cloud properties, wave heights and ice conditions. 

She is designed for helicopter operations in up to sea state 3 and the deployment of watercraft in up to sea state 4. Her cruising speed is 12 knots.

Source:maritime-executive

Autonomous Navigation along Inland Waterways

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Advances in autonomous and computer assisted navigation could be applied along selected navigable inland waterways and sections of such waterways to improve future cost effectiveness and competitiveness of waterway transportation. The greatest benefit would occur along sections of comparatively narrow waterways where wave heights are minimal and navigation locks absent. The list of waterways would include sections of the Ganges River, Indus River, Nile River, Amazon River, Parana River, Mackenzie River, Lower St Lawrence River, Lower Hudson River and the Lower Mississippi River.

Introduction

At the present day, self-powered and tug-propelled barges carry essential goods and cargo along navigable waterways in many countries. While slower than railway transportation, waterway transportation involving multiple coupled barges can move greater tonnage of bulk freight at lower cost. On the Lower Mississippi River between New Orleans and Memphis where navigation locks are absent, barges may be coupled four-abreast by 10-lengthwise into flotillas that a pair of tugboats would propel and navigate. The tugboat pilots would communicate with each other by radio to negotiate each flotilla through curves along the river.

Evolving computer-based autonomous navigation technology has advanced to a level where a single pilot could simultaneously direct the operation of multiple tugs to propel a barge flotilla and precisely negotiate curves along the river. At present, it might present a challenge to tug boat pilots to coordinate the movement of a team of tugboats to propel 80-barges coupled in two groups of 40 barges or four groups of 20 barges and precisely negotiate the articulated coupled assembly through curves. It is becoming possible for modern computer technology coupled to satellite navigation to achieve such a task of navigation.

Vessel Assemblies

The coupling of multiple vessels and type of vessels would depend on such factors as allowable draft, allowable navigation width and overhead clearances. On the Lower St Lawrence River, it may be possible modify three or four older Panamax ships to be coupled lengthwise into a river train of 3,000 to 4,000-feet length and capable of carrying the payload of a neo-Panamax container ship. Electrical power cables would connect through the assembly to operate bilge pumps, side thrusters and propellers, with a power generation vessel coupled at the stern. Assemblies of smaller vessels would sail along shallower rivers.

India’s computer-based, high-tech sector is based in the Hyderabad – Bangalore region, and the nation has need to move massive volumes of bulk freight, including food and agricultural produce from the northern regions to the nation’s southern region. On sections of the Ganges River, there may be scope to operate coupled assemblies of barges that could move the massive tonnage of bulk freight at lower cost than either India’s railways or truck transportation sector. The computer talent at Hyderabad and Bangalore could develop the autonomous vessel control technology to safely navigate extensive coupled barge assemblies along the Ganges River.

Northern Canada

Several years ago, a research group worked with the Northern Transportation Company to develop computer control technology to allow an extended length of river train involving multiple barges to sail along the Mackenzie River between Great Slave Lake and the Beaufort Sea. Recent political controversy in Canada involving pipelines invites a reexamination of computer assisted navigation of coupled vessel assemblies and especially in view that the Mackenzie River is free of navigation locks. Barges on the Mackenzie measure 50-feet beam by 450-feet length, with potential to couple two abreast when assisted by computer navigation.

Each barge can carry heavy bulk freight (ore, oil) at six times the width and double the height of a railway car and lightweight (grain) at three times the height and eight times the length. This translates to 96 railway cars for heavy bulk freight and 144 railway cars for lighter bulk freight. Each barge assembly would be coupled two abreast by five lengthwise, with each river train comprising three assemblies (30 barges) and a minimum of three tugs linked to operate with autonomous computer directed navigation control with satellite input to assure precise sailing through curves. The barge train could carry the same volume of grain as 3,000 railway cars.

South America

Fed by several tributaries that originate in the Andes Mountains, the Parana and Paraguay Rivers between Buenos Aires, Argentina and Asuncion, Paraguay is free from navigation locks and is a main transportation corridor in the region. Tugs routinely propel and navigate barge assemblies with barges coupled four abreast and several barges lengthwise, carrying either bulk freight or containers. Container-on-barge is well established on the Parana and Paraguay Rivers, connecting to ocean container ships at Port of Buenos Aires. Future market demand for transportation services will determine the introduction of extended length barge assemblies that sail with autonomous computer directed control.

While tug barges carry bulk freight along the Uruguay River, the main South American rivers that represent future candidates for the future operation of extended length barge trains would include sections of the Amazon River, Tocantins River, Sao Francisco River and Parana/Paraguay River between Buenos Aires and Asuncion. In terms of feasibly carrying bulk freight at low rates in the north – south direction, the South American river barge and coastal ship transport industries both are very competitive with railways that operate in the region. 

Other Nations

There are sections of the Congo River, Nile River and Niger where extended length barge trains assisted by autonomous or computer controlled navigation could carry bulk freight. Several navigable rivers in Russia flow north toward the Arctic Ocean, where seasonal ship traffic sails. There would be scope to carry bulk freight such as forest products, oil and mining ore on extended length barge trains that sail along sections of Russian rivers that are free of navigation locks.

Conclusions

The operation of extended length coupled barge trains along stretches of inland waterways that are free of navigation locks, could provide lower transportation costs when moving large volumes of bulk cargo. Changing weather patterns hold the promise of Western Canada being able to sustain agriculture in more northerly locations and closer to a future southern terminal for extended length barge trains that sail to and from the Beaufort Sea, to interline with ocean going ships sailing to either Asia or to Western Europe. There would be future scope of sailing extreme length of barge trains along the Lower Mississippi River.

Source:maritime-executive

Carnegie hits choppy waters over wave funds

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The state government of Western Australia (WA) has withheld a payment of over A$5m due to Carnegie Clean Energy for the latter's Albany wave project.

In a statement released to the Australian Securities Exchange, Carnegie said it submitted an invoice for A$5.25m to WA for the first project milestone in July but two months later it has yet to receive the funds.

The developer is in discussions around the payment and it expects to resolve the matter by the end of September, it added.

Procurement activities and timing of the project consisting of a single 1.5MW Ceto 6 point absorber device currently due online by 2020 have been impacted by proposed changes to the Australian federal government’s R&D Tax Incentive scheme, the statement said.

“Carnegie is currently seeking clarity from the federal government on whether these proposed changes are still likely to be implemented and, if so, in what form and with what effective timing,” it added.

Any changes to the R&D tax incentive could lead to a project delay and/or the requirement to seek additional funding.”

Carnegie said its ability to continue to progress the project is constrained until the uncertainty is resolved but it will continue to progress the development of Ceto device in the meantime.

The Albany project is supported by A$15.75m from WA and A$11.7m of undrawn funding from Carnegie’s A$13m Ceto 6 grant from the Australian Renewable Energy Agency.

Source:renews

Senvion sorts Borkum 2.2 storage

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Senvion has signed an agreement with Buss Group's Orange Blue Terminal in Eemshaven to handle turbine components for a Trianel offshore wind farm in the German North Sea.

Buss will cover planning, transport and interim storage at the terminal (pictured), as well as pre-assembly and 'just-in-time' delivery of the components to the quayside for load-out to the 200MW Borkum West 2.2 projec

Planning should be completed before the end of the year, the company said. From spring 2019, components for the 32 Senvion 6.3MW machines will start arriving at the terminal.

Buss said 80,000 square metres of the 250,000 square metre terminal will be used for storage, handling and pre-assembly.

Borkum West 2.2 is expected to be operational by autumn 2019.

Source:renews

Seagreen targets 120 turbines

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SSE and Fluor have submitted an application to the Scottish government for the Seagreen Alpha and Bravo offshore wind farms that includes a reduction in the number of turbines to a maximum of 120 from 150 previously.

The developers also confirmed that they are targeting total capacity of up to 1.5GW for the overall project, an increase from 1050MW previously planned.

Turbines would have a maximum tip height of 280 metres above the lowest astronomical tide and have rotor diameters of up to 220 metres instead of 167 metres in an earlier proposal.

The Alpha and Bravo sites will now have a maximum of 70 turbines each, down from 75 previously.

This application takes advantage of the developments in wind turbine technology since the project received its original consent back in 2014, with the proposal of fewer, larger, higher capacity wind turbines and the inclusion of monopiles as a foundation option,“ Seagreen said.

ABB connects Swedish sun

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ABB is providing equipment to connect Goteborg Energi's 5.5MW Save solar farm in Sweden to the Scandinavian country's grid.

Work on the plant, which is located near Save airport outside Gothenburg, started this week on an 11-hectare site.

ABB is delivering a substation with switchgear, distribution transformers and relays, as well as control equipment and inverters.

The company's Ability platform will also provide smart monitoring, troubleshooting and control for the project, which is expected to come online in November.

Goteborg Energi managing director Alf Engqvist said: “With our investment we will increase the production of renewable electricity and take another step towards a renewable energy system.”

We have always had great experience and relations with ABB and so it felt quite natural to include them in this journey.

ABB Sweden managing director Johan Soderstrom said: “It is great to be part of Sweden's largest solar energy investment, together with Göteborg Energi.”

The changeover to renewable energy sources in the electricity grid is ongoing and sustainable power supply is crucial for the future. Advanced technology and digital solutions will play an important role in the energy transition.”

Source:renews

Bangladesh Shelves LNG Projects as Others Ramp Up

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Bangladesh has put aside two smaller liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects with trading houses Gunvor and Vitol to focus on two larger LNG import terminals, one of which is already in use while the second will start up in March.

Bangladesh has turned to LNG to offset falling domestic gas output to feed industrial demand and electricity generation in a nation of 160 million people where a third have no power supply.

It aims to import 17 million tonnes a year of LNG by 2025, which in today's terms would make it a top five importer. This attracted commodity merchants Vitol, Gunvor and Trafigura in their bid to muscle in on the global LNG business.

Bangladesh began importing LNG on a regular basis this month after the arrival of a Floating Storage and Regasification Unit (FSRU) in April in Moheshkhali port by Cox's Bazar.

A second FSRU project, operated by Summit Corp with Japan's Mitsubishi Corp as partner, will start operations in March and double the country's import capacity to 7.5 million tonnes a year.

Bangladesh had also touted several smaller projects, drawing interest from Vitol, Gunvor and Trafigura, as well as energy giants like Exxon Mobil. It is now changing tack. "These small projects are not a priority anymore," said Mohammad Quamruzzaman, managing director of the Rupantarita Prakritik Gas Co, the unit in charge of LNG imports at state-owned oil firm Petrobangla.

"These are costlier than the bigger ones. Why should we go for the costlier option when there is no urgency right now? One bigger-capacity FSRU has started operations and another is expected to be commissioned by March," he told Reuters.

Chasing Deals
Trafigura and Gunvor had vied for smaller LNG projects close to Chittagong, an industrial region north of Cox's Bazar.

Bangladesh said in May it had terminated talks with Trafigura.

Vitol was chosen above Exxon to develop a small FSRU by the ageing Sangu gas platform in the Bay of Bengal.

Vitol said on Thursday it had no comment when asked about LNG plans in Bangladesh.

Gunvor appeared to have progressed the farthest with its plan to import LNG for a fertilizer complex. Belgian shipping firm Exmar said in May that Gunvor had chartered its small FSRU for 10 years.

When asked about the Gunvor project, Quamruzzaman said its chances were "very slim", although he said all the LNG projects could be revived at anytime.

A Gunvor spokesman said: "Our project has not been dropped."

Exmar said this month the FSRU was at a shipyard being modified.

A senior Petrobangla official said the terms for the Gunvor deal was for LNG priced at 11.95 percent of Brent crude plus a fixed $0.93 per million British thermal units (mmBtu) and an additional $1.075 per mmBtu as infrastructure cost.

When Brent crude prices are at $70 a barrel, that translates to $10.37 per mmBtu and at $80 a barrel, it is $11.57 per mmBtu compared to $11.40 per mmBtu for October delivery on the spot market last week.

"The deal with the trader (Gunvor) was almost finalized but it got delayed," the senior official said. "Now the big FSRU came online and we doubt this (the Gunvor deal) will happen."

Source:marinelink

C-Job Researching Ammonia as Marine Fuel

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C-Job Naval Architects based in the Netherlands announced it has joined the Ammonia Energy Association, strengthening its commitment to research ammonia as a renewable fuel for the maritime industry.

With the International Maritime Organization announcing its plans to reduce and eventually fully eliminate ship emissions, it is of the utmost importance that the global maritime industry looks into renewable fuels. C-Job said it has identified Hydrogen Based Renewables (HBR) as the best solution and sees ammonia (NH3) as a high potential.

Niels de Vries, Naval Architect at C-Job, said "We are committed to further research ammonia’s potential and have the ambition to realize a safe and efficient ammonia fueled vessel."

"We’re excited to be part of the Ammonia Energy Association whose views on the future of renewable fuels in the maritime industry match the vision of C-Job," de Vries said. "As a member we look forward to further intensify our collaboration with other industries to realize our ambition."

C-Job has been researching the viability of ammonia as ship’s fuel for the past few years, and it said the results look promising. Ammonia can be created by using the periodic overcapacity of other renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power. Due to ammonia’s long history in the fertilizer industry, it is an easily sourced material with established safe working practices. These safe working practices are crucial first steps to further implement ammonia as a fuel in the maritime sector.

"We think that ammonia could be a viable and promising option for a clean and sustainable fuel," de Vries said. "C-Job has a strong track-record of using the latest technologies to design sustainable and future-proof vessels – an ammonia-powered ammonia carrier free of harmful emissions, is just one example of what the future might hold."

Later this year C-Job will participate in the 15th annual NH3 Fuel Conference starting on October 31, in Pittsburgh, Pa., where during the second day C-Job will be part of the maritime panel to discuss challenges of implementation of ammonia as a fuel, the readiness of ammonia engine technologies, and the near-term opportunities for pilot projects and demonstrations.

Source:marinelink

Noble buys newbuild jackup, wins first contract

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 Noble Corp. plc has purchased a new GustoMSC CJ46 design jackup rig from the PaxOcean Group in connection with a concurrently awarded drilling contract.

Noble paid $33.75 million of the $93.75 million purchase price in cash, with the remainder of the purchase price, or $60 million seller-financed at a 4.25% interest rate paid in cash and 1.25% paid in kind over the term of the financing. The company said it used existing cash balances for the initial payment and the secured seller-financed amount is to be repaid in four years.

The company also has an option to purchase a second newbuild CJ46 jackup from PaxOcean.

The newbuild jackup, to be named the Noble Johnny Whitstine, was built at the PaxOcean Graha shipyard in Batam, Indonesia.

The rig is designed to operate in water depths of up to 375 ft (114 m) and well depths of 30,000 ft (9,144 m). It features a modern drilling control system and versatile 70 ft x 40 ft (21 m x 12 m) envelope cantilever skidding system equipped with two BOPs.

In connection with the purchase, Noble has entered into a new drilling contract in the Middle East with a three-year primary term, plus a one-year option. Drilling is expected to begin in early 2019.

Julie J. Robertson, chairman, president and CEO of Noble Corp. plc, said: “With our premium jackup rig fleet fully committed through late-2018, and further evidence of rising jackup demand into 2019, we remain focused on growth opportunities that reinforce our competitive position.

This attractive acquisition of a proven and highly versatile jackup design will provide us with a near-term contract commitment and future opportunities where growing customer demand is evident.”

Source:offshore-mag

Mixed results for Aker BP in latest North Sea Hanz wells

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The jackup Maersk Intrepid has completed three appraisal wells for Aker BP on the Hanz oilfield in the central Norwegian North Sea, and a wildcat well to the southeast.

According to the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate (NPD), all were drilled around 14 km (8.7 mi) north of the Aker BP-operated Ivar Aasen field and 180 km (112 mi) northwest of Stavanger.

Hanz was proven in 1997 in upper Jurassic reservoir rocks within intra-Draupne formation sandstones.

The objective of the wells on the Hanz field was to delineate the field, investigate potential additional resources in underlying Middle Jurassic reservoir rocks (the Hugin formation), reduce the uncertainty about the extent of the reservoir sandstones and thus lower uncertainty for the field’s estimated resources.

The primary exploration target for wildcat well 25/10-16 B was to prove petroleum in Upper Jurassic sandstones (the Intra-Draupne formation), while the secondary exploration target was to investigate the underlying Hugin formation. The prospect was partially situated in production license 915, just to the southeast of production license 028 B.

Two of the appraisal wells encountered hydrocarbons. Well 25/10-16 S penetrated a 30-m (98.4-ft) gas column and a similar length oil column in the Draupne formation, mainly with good reservoir quality, while well 25/10-16 A intersected a 15-m (49-ft) gas column in the Hugin formation.

The other wells were dry.

Aker BP’s early estimates of Hanz’s size remain within the range of uncertainty for the resource estimate prior to drilling of the wells. The field is included in the development plan for Ivar Aasen.

The Maersk Intrepid will now drill development wells on the Martin Linge field in the North Sea for Equinor.
Source:offshore-mag