New Research Vessel for Greenland
Greenland has an intense interest in maritime research and survey for the near coastal waters, thanks in part to a growing seafood sector, an extensive coastline and some 250 different species of fish. To meet the nation’s emerging need, Greenland had a 32.3-m research vessel built at the Karstensen’s Shipyard in Skagen, Denmark. The vessel was named R/V Sanna by Helle Siegstad, Head of the Department of Fish and Shellfish, in a ceremony at Nuuk, Greenland in April of 2012.
The R/V Sanna then went into service with the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources researching the Greenland halibut, crab, and cod stocks in Greenland’s coastal waters and ice fjords. A larger vessel, the 1971-built stern trawler Pâmiut serves primarily to research shrimp and Greenland halibut in more open waters. The R/V Sanna, with a 10-meter beam and depth from main deck of 4.88 meters, is, under the command of Captain Rink Heinrich, capable of a wide range of research. The vessel is equipped for trawling, gillnets, long lines and pot fishing. Researchers have two wet and one dry laboratory with fume-hood, a chemical laboratory, cold and freezer laboratory and a -80 Celsius freezer. Designed by OSK-Shiptech in collaboration with the scientists from Greenland, the ship has accommodation for 16 people in a total of nine cabins. A Cummins K38-M Tier 2 engine rated for 1000 HP at 1800 RPM, turning a variable-pitch Hundested propeller, provides main propulsion. Given the northern climate and long winters, the R/V Sanna works the west coast of Greenland only six months of the year. Between her launch and February 2015 she has put 7371 hours on her Cummins main without any problems. To meet the extensive electronic needs of multiple winches, bow thruster as well as laboratories and navigational equipment the R/V Sanna has a pair of Cummins QSM11D-powered generators to provide 220 kW of power. Given her quality build and strong service support by the Esbjerg branch of Granly Diesel A/S the research vessel can be expected to continue and an important asset to arctic fisheries research for many years to come.
(As published in the March 2015 edition of Marine Technology Reporter - http://www.marinetechnologynews.com/Magazine)
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Other stories from March 2015 issue
Content
- MTR March Editorial page: 6
- Virtual Aids to Navigation Mark Research Equipment page: 14
- New Research Vessel for Greenland page: 16
- New Dive Support Vessel for N-sea page: 18
- New Survey Vessel for Port of London page: 20
- Construction Vessel Delivered to Eidesvik page: 20
- Wind Farm Vessel Named page: 20
- Gliders (Silently) Making O&G Ops Cheaper, More Efficient page: 22
- Seafloor Mapping Aids Safety & Efficiency page: 26
- Mapping the Abyss with AUV Photography page: 32
- Insights: NOAA's Dr. Holly A. Bamford page: 40
- Adventure Under Ice page: 50
- The World’s Cold Ocean Lab page: 58
- Newfoundland and Labrador: Sensing Success page: 63
- Virtual Worlds: Newfoundland and Labrador's Simulator Tech page: 66
- PulSAR: New SSS for SAR Operations page: 72
- PREVCO Subsea: New 15,000 PSI Chamber page: 72
- SeeByte Software for L-3 Klein Sonar page: 72
- SeaBotix LBV Performs for Lake Erie Diving page: 73
- WiFi & GPS to X-Series Profilers page: 73
- STR SeaSpyder Systems for AIFCA page: 73
- Software Aids Subsea Power Cable Installation page: 74
- Sonardyne Ranger 2 for Pioneering Spirit page: 74
- OSIL & ASV: Mooring-free Buoy Launched page: 74
- SWE’s New Portable Power System page: 74
- Waveblade Tested at The Underwater Center page: 74
- Sonar Makers Partner for Seagrass Surveys page: 75
- Kongsberg Connects Seismic Vessels page: 75
- TE Connectivity INSTALITE Boots page: 76
- Outland Technology LED Laser Light page: 76
- Tritech Sonars for Swedish Navy ROVs page: 76
- New Subsea Modular Spreader Beams page: 76
- Teledyne TSS’s Saturn AHRS and INS page: 76
- ValeportDebuts New Datalog Software page: 76
- Nav Charts App Launched page: 76
- New Tool Recovers Oil from Sunken Wrecks page: 77