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N-Sea starts work on £30M North Sea IRM

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Netherlands-based subsea services provider N-Sea has started a three-year inspection, repair and maintenance project in the central and northern North Sea for an undisclosed oil and gas company.

The contract will utilise N-Sea vessels and project crews for both vessel-based and daughter craft-based diving alongside ROV operations.

N-Sea business development manager Dave Hamill said “This type of IRM service, inclusive of vessel-based, daughter craft and ROV diving, is at the core of our business and the length and scope of this contract demonstrates confidence in our ability to deliver complex and challenging subsea projects.

The vessels that will take part in the work were not disclosed but N-Sea's fleet comprises dive, multi-support and construction vessel Siem N-Sea, ROV diving and survey vessel Noordhoek Pathfinder, near-shore dive support vessel Neptunus and three daughter craft, AberlourEdradour and Fettercairn.

Source:seawanderer

Tractebel strengthens position

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Tractebel, part of Engie, has announced the acquisition of Overdick, the Hamburg-based offshore engineering company, through its subsidiary Lahmeyer International.  

Tractebel described the acquisition of the German company as “a perfect strategic fit” that will enable it to “reinforce its position as a leading consulting and engineering company in the energy transition.”

Founded in 2000, Overdick specialises in offshore engineering and design and maintenance and inspection services. The company offers a wide range of services within offshore wind, offshore oil and gas, naval architecture, marine operations, platform removal and salvage.

Tractebel will benefit from Overdick’s know-how in design, construction, transportation and installation of wind turbine and foundations for offshore substations.

Among Overdick’s numerous references cited by Tractebel are the design of the jack-up vessel Innovation and execution of the overall design of a number of the HVDC platforms in the German North Sea.

Closing of the transaction will take place by the end of September 2018 following customary closing conditions and regulatory approvals.

Source:seawanderer

Maersk to opt for scrubbers

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The world's biggest container shipping company, A.P. Moller-Maersk, said it will add exhaust gas cleaning systems to some of its ships to achieve compliance with the IMO's 2020 sulphur cap. This follows an announcement by the Danish giant last February that it would choose low sulphur fuel oil over scrubbers.

The news comes amid a hot debate in shipping industry, regarding to which is the best solution for compliance with the stringent environmental regulations. The key options vary between the use of scrubbers or LSFO (low sulphur fuel oils), including LNG.

As a member of the Trident Alliance, the association of shipowners committed to the strong enforcement of the sulphur cap, Maersk has been exploring viable solutions to the enforcement challenges. In its sustainability report, the company said it would not opt for scrubbers, but would replace the cheaper bunker oil with fuels with a lower sulphur content instead.

However, in an email to Reuters this week, Niels-Henrik Lindegaard, head of Maersk Oil Trading, said the company has decided to invest in new scrubber technology on a limited part of its fleet of around 750 container ships.

"Using scrubber technology is a small part of – and just one of several elements in – our overall 2020 fuel sourcing strategy to ensure compliance in time,"..he noted. Though, Maersk still sees low sulphur fuel as the best solution for compliance, he added.

A recent trend in the industry sees an increasing shift to scrubber technology over the last months, with the Exhaust Gas Cleaning Systems Association (EGCSA) counting 983 vessels fitted with scrubbers as of 31 May 2018. Despite their high installation cost, scrubbers allow ships to continue burning cheap high-sulphur bunker fuel, which has set HSFO forecasts higher than expected.

Source:seawanderer

Environmental Lawyer Try to Block NordStream2

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Environmental law organization ClientEarth has filed a complaint to Sweden’s Supreme Administrative Court to halt the construction of a 510 kilometer-long section of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline in Swedish waters.

The environmental lawyers argue that the construction documents are incomplete and inaccurate, as they fail to consider the impact the pipeline will have on marine wildlife in the Baltic Sea.

The pipeline will link Russia and Germany, supplying Russian natural gas to Europe. It is scheduled to be operational next year and will largely follow the route and technical concept of the Nord Stream pipeline. The new gas pipeline will be able to supply 55 billion cubic meters of gas per year, which will be sufficient to provide 26 million households with heat and electricity every year. 

The construction of the pipeline was approved by the Swedish Ministry of Enterprise and Innovation on June 7, 2018. Owned by Russian gas giant Gazprom, the pipeline will run through the Swedish exclusive economic zone.

Constructing the pipeline will entail detonating ammunition from the Second World War, currently sitting on the seafloor. Underwater detonations can cause serious harm to protected marine mammals. The harbor porpoise, for instance, is subject to strict protection, as there are only 450 left in the Baltic Sea. According to the experts of the Institute of Oceanography of Gdansk, any negative impacts on even one individual may affect its entire population.

Marcin Stoczkiewicz, Head of ClientEarth’s Central & Eastern Europe operations, said: “The investor has disregarded the precautionary principle, which requires that the environment take priority when doubts and potential impacts are being taken into account.

ClientEarth additionally claims that Nord Stream 2 threatens the European Union’s energy security, making the E.U. more dependent on fossil fuels. Stoczkiewicz says the construction of the gas pipeline will have adverse effects on the development of clean, renewable energy in Central Eastern Europe.

U.S. President Donald Trump has claimed the project will increase Europe's dependence on Russia. However, his critics say that his criticism reflects a desire to promote the sale of U.S. LNG to Europe, and Germany says the pipeline will increase Europe's energy security by avoiding potential supply disruptions via the Ukraine.

Russia, Germany, Finland and Sweden have granted all the permits necessary for construction of the pipeline within their jurisdictions. The national permitting procedure in Denmark is ongoing.

In May, ClientEarth submitted a similar complaint in Finland to stop the construction of the pipeline running through Finnish territorial waters. The offshore pipelay vessel Solitaire started the pipelay for Nord Stream 2 in the Gulf of Finland earlier this month.

The pipeline along the Baltic seabed will be approximately 1,200 kilometers (750 miles) long, jeopardizing the flora and fauna of the entire maritime area, says ClientEarth.

Source:seawanderer

LNG carrier ‘Vladimir Vize’

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MOL announced that on 11 September, a naming ceremony for an ice-breaking LNG carrier, which was jointly ordered by MOL and COSCO, took place at Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering (DSME).

The newbuild vessel was named "Vladimir Vize", in honor of the Russian Arctic explorer and oceanologist. 'Vladimir Vize' is the sister vessel of the "Vladimir Rusanov", which started transport service at the end of March 2018, transporting LNG for the YAMAL LNG Project.

The 'Vladimir Vize' is scheduled to start service for the Yamal LNG project after its delivery at the end of September in DSME. It will carry out its operation without ice-breaker support in the Northern Sea Route towards the Yamal LNG plant at Sabetta port in Russia.

In addition, the construction of the last of the three newbuild ice-breaking LNG vessels are progressing as planned in DSME, and will be delivered to the Yamal LNG Project next year.

As for the four conventional LNG carriers for the Yamal LNG Projec, their construction is expected to be completed during 2019 – 2020.

The second train at the Yamal LNG plant started its operation in August 2018, with LNG production from the plant  expanding steadily.

 Source:seawanderer

New instrument built to explore deep sea

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A fisheries biologist and acoustics researcher at the Northeast Fisheries Science Center (NEFSC) laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass., Mike Jech is collaborating with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) on a new instrument platform called Deep-See. This instrument will send high resolution real-time images and data.

On August 11, the NOAA Ship Henry B. Bigelow left Newport, RI, for 10 days with 16 scientists to take the new instrument to sea for the first time for testing, calibration and evaluation.

Deep-See is an acoustic, optic, oceanographic, and biological sampling system that has wideband echosounders, stereo and holographic cameras, environmental and light sensors, and eDNA instruments towed at the depths of the meso and bathypelagic communities to get an in-depth view of the organisms living there.

The towed platform carries many instruments and sensors adapted for use on this platform. It will collect data and send real-time information back to the surface for researchers to see and monitor.

According to Mr. Jech, the goal is to explore an area of the open ocean just off the edge of the continental shelf  known as the Twilight Zone, where light from the surface stops penetrating, from about 200 to 1,000 meters depth.

This first cruise will allow the scientists to test the platform and see how all the sensors and instruments work together and how they adapt to pressure under water.

What is more, a 0.681 inch fiber optic cable with three copper conductors and three optical fibers will provide enough power and bandwidth to communicate with all the sensors and instruments on the platform.  Nathan Keith, the NEFSC’s vessel coordinator, helped Jech locate the cable at the Southwest Fisheries Science Center in La Jolla, California.

The Bigelow is the first NOAA Fisheries research vessel to have this ability. The addition of fiber optic technology, as well as the vessel’s other scientific and gear handling capabilities, will expands the utility of the Henry B. Bigelow for scientific monitoring and research.

Source:seawanderer

Sovcomflot orders LNG-powered

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PAO Sovcomflot (SCF Group) has ordered a pair LNG-powered aframax tanker newbuilds backed by 20-year charters from Rosneft.

Ordered at Zvezda Shipbuilding Complex the signing ceremony was attended by Russian Federation President Vladimir Putin, with agreements signed by the owner, shipbuilder, Rosneft and VEB-Leasing which is financing the vessels construction.

The 114,000 dwt, LNG-fuelled tankers will be 1A/1B ice class are designed to operate in sub-Arctic seas and Russian ports of the Baltic region all year round. The vessels will cut SOx emissions by 100%, NOx by 70% and CO2 by 27% compared to similar vessels operating on heavy fuel oil.

Sergey Frank, president and ceo of SCF Group said:“I am confident that the experience gained in the technical and commercial operation of SCF’s next generation tankers will be in demand both with our customers and Russian shipbuilders, helping to consolidate the leadership of Russian companies in the implementation of “green technologies” in maritime transport. Sovcomflot is grateful to Rosneft for its decision to use next generation LNG-fuelled tankers in its export programme.”

The newbuildings add to six LNG-powered aframaxes that SCF Group already has on order that will be chartered by Shell. Malaysia's AET Tankers the and Russian shipowner have both thrown their weight behind LNG fuelled tankers for the future.

Source:seawanderer

LNG carrier spot rates soar as US export

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The nearby spot rates for chartering large LNG carriers have been soaring at a time when future US export projects, fueling forward activity, continue to be given the “green-light”.

Recent reports from equity analysts, LNG has provided news that has featured prominently. Analysts at Cowen Securities have highlighted developments at Cheniere and Tellurian Cheniere, which has been a first mover among exporters, has been exporting cargo from Sabine Pass, on the Texas Louisiana border, since 2016, with its next facility, in Corpus Christi, set to come on line later this year.

The Cowen report highlighted regulatory approvals on Phase 3 at Corpus, which would come on stream in 2021, when Cheniere’s overall “nameplate” capacity- at Sabine and at Corpus, would exceed 20m metric tons annually.

Cowen notes that Tellurian’s Driftwood project, where molecules would be exported from a facility near Lake Charles, La, has seen a slight delay into early 2019, in obtaining a federal authorisation of its Environmental Impact Statement. They comment: “The approvals can still accommodate the company's goal for FID in 1H19 with operations commencing 2023.” If all the stars align, this project would be able to produce approximately 27m tons a year of LNG for export; the first phase would have the capacity for 11m tons a year of exports – if it goes according to plan.

While US exports, moving across the Atlantic and to the Pacific, through the Panama Canal, said to be increasing the number of allowed LNG transits, continue to attract attention, they are still a small component of seaborne LNG shipments. The growing spot component of LNG sales, from the US and also from traditional sources (with Qatar and Australia dominating) have brought more volatility to LNG charters.

Morgan Stanley’s Fotis Giannakoulis headlined his weekly Maritime Industries report with “LNG Tonnage Disappears as Global Prices Soar,” while Jefferies’ analyst Randy Giveans titled his report with “Atlantic LNG Shipping Rates Rise to $85,000 per day.

Evercore ISI analyst Jonathan Chappell, a proponent of the sector even before the present run-up, offered the caption “Much More In Store than just a Seasonal Spike…Though that is Likely Coming too” on his publication. Chappell explained that: “Short-term rate volatility has been somewhat extreme over the last 12 months, with a meaningful winter spike late last year followed by typical seasonal weakening in the spring.” He added: “However, over the last few months short-term rates have strengthened materially, counter-seasonally, touching the highest levels since the last bull market of 2012.

All shipping markets are caught in a tussle between available supply, and demand to move cargoes; clearly, the latter is driving the boat at this point in time. Morgan Stanley, in its report, suggested that: “Global LNG prices continue to climb driven by strong end-user demand and rising oil prices. October deliveries to Asia are now selling close to $12 pre mmbtu or +92% Year over year.

In a similar vein, Jefferies explained that: “Charterers such as Cheniere, Chevron, and Uniper continue to lock in multi-month contracts ahead of the winter.” Evercore ISI’s analysis framed the chart for the coming months, with the present base “elevating the starting point for another anticipated winter market rally and the next cyclical upturn expected to begin in 2019 (but apparently already under way).

Source:seawanderer

Container volumes at the Port of Long Beach

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Container volumes at the Port of Long Beach dropped by 1.9% in August compared to the same month the year before. Namely, a total of 679,543 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) were moved through the Port.

Imports also declined 3.6% to 343,029 TEUs, while exports increased by 1.9% to 119,546 TEUs. Empty containers sent overseas reduced by 1.1% to 16,968 TEUs.

This is contrary to August 2017, which was one of the busiest months in the Port of Long Beach’s 107-year history. At the time, it was the third-busiest month ever, and the mark has been exceeded three times since.

Long Beach’s volumes through the first eight months of the year stand at 5,320,930 TEUs, a number that is 9.4% above the pace of 2017, the Port’s best year ever.

According to the Port of Long Beach's, Executive Director Mario Cordero, this decline is due to 'a realignment of ocean carrier alliance services and port calls'.

In addition, another factor is higher tariffs by the US and China, something that helped increase traffic, as shippers act to beat duties imposed on goods this summer.

Source:seawanderer

Yemeni navy seizes Houthis

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The Yemeni Navy managed to prevent an attempt by Houthi rebels against ships in the Red Sea. According to initial reports, Yemeni forces seized a a booby-trapped boat sent by the Houthis to attack international ships in the area.

According to UAE media Khaleej Times, the booby-trapped boat was loaded with explosive devices and traveling at a high speed of 35 knots on its way to international waters in the Red Sea to intercept a merchant ship.

The source pointed out that the naval military teams of the Yemeni army intercepted and halted the boat at an uninhabited island.

Houthis attacks against merchant and navy ships in the Red Sea are often. In May 2018, a missile or rocket damaged a Turkish-flagged bulk cargo vessel while at anchor in the Red Sea awaiting entry into As-Salif, Yemen.

More recently, in late July, Saudi Arabia announced a temporary halting of all oil shipments through the Red Sea shipping lane of Bab al-Mandeb, after Houthis rebels attacked two Saudi Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) in the Red Sea.

These come in addition of a series of Houthi attacks on ships off the coast of Yemen, specially on the aftermath of the Saudi coalition’s closure of Red Sea ports back in November.

Source:seawanderer