Page 3rd Cover: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (January 1992)

Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of January 1992 Maritime Reporter Magazine

Photo shows Marine Industries Northwest Inc.'s new drydock, MINI I, with Western Pioneer freighter

Yellowfin docked for a scheduled underwater inspection, tailshafting repairs, and painting.

Marine Industries Northwests

Newly Acquired Drydock 'MINI V

Now Fully Operational

Marine Industries Northwest In- corporated (MINI) now has its re- cently acquired 2,800-ton-capacity drydock, MINI I, fully operational at the Tacoma, Wash., shipyard.

The reinforced concrete MINI I drydock measures 389 feet long and has a clear width of 57 feet between wingwalls. It features eight high- capacity pumps arranged in four pump rooms, 12 watertight compart- ments for operational flexibility, a pair of traveling wing wall cranes, modern waste collection system, and a control room.

The new drydock allows MINI I to accommodate expanded markets such as oil rig vessels, spill response vessels, catcher processors, large tugs, mud boat conversions, and coastwise freighters.

Marine Industries Northwest is a full service shipyard serving the

Pacific Northwest more than 15 years, specializing in the conver- sion/repair work of barges, tugs, and coastal freighters to ABS and USCG standards.

For free literature detailing the facilities and capabilities of MINI,

Circle 11 on Reader Service Card

Trinity Marine To Build

Third LPG Barge

For Hollywood Marine

Trinity Industries, Inc., subsid- iary, Trinity-Beaumont has been awarded a contract to build a 15,000- barrel-capacity liquid propane gas (LPG) barge for Hollywood Marine,

Inc., Houston, Texas.

The new barge will be 260 feet long, with a 52.5-foot beam, and 12- foot depth. Construction has begun and delivery is expected in the spring of 1992.

The barge's two 7,500-barrel LPG tanks will be provided by Hollywood

Marine, which will also perform the final outfitting on the vessel.

John Dane III, president of the

Trinity Marine Group, which in- cludes Trinity-Beaumont, said this new contract will create a need for about 50 additional shipbuilders at the Beaumont, Texas, shipyard. He added that a recent contract for four 208-foot oil spill recovery ships and

Rauma Yards, Hollming

To Combine Operations

Under New Company Name

It was recently disclosed that

Finland's Rauma Yards and

Hollming have agreed to combine their shipyard operations based in

Rauma under a new company name.

To win bigger projects through better delivery times and lower costs, the two shipyards will be kept open and will work together.

The Finnish Government has agreed to take a 13 percent stake in the company, while Rauma Ltd. will take 47.9 percent and Hollming 39.1 percent.

The joint order books of the two soon-to-be refurbished drydock at the Beaumont facility will bring to- tal employment there to about 500.

Trinity acquired the closed ship- yard from Bethlehem Steel in June 1989, and reopened it in 1990.

Trinity-Beaumont delivered two 15,000-barrel liquid flammable gas barges to Hollywood Marine in Sep- tember and October of 1991. Those barges are 260 feet long, with a 45- foot beam, and 12-foot depth. All six high pressure tanks for the vessels will be provided by Beaird Indus- tries, Inc., Shreveport, La., another

Trinity company.

The Trinity Marine Group,

Gulfport, Miss., is owned by Trinity

Industries, Inc., Dallas, Texas.

In addition to Trinity-Beaumont, the group includes Gretna Machine & Iron Works, Inc.; Halter Marine,

Inc.; Moss Point Marine, Inc.; Equi- table Shipyards, Inc.; Aluminum

Boats, Inc.; and HBC Barge, Inc.

For free literature detailing the ship construction and repair ser- vices of the Trinity Marine Group,

Circle 73 on Reader Service Card yards, worth about $481.9 million, will be transferred to the new com- pany, and net sales are forecast at around $342.5 million for 1992.

Included in the current order book are two cruise ships, a multipurpose icebreaker, a missile boat, an inland waterway ferry and various hull and other ship sections.

The managing director of

Hollming, Aamo Mannonen, said the combining of the two yards would have a positive effect on the new company's ability to compete on price and delivery.

The new company, as yet un- named, will also acquire

Aquamaster-Rauma Oy and

Pipemasters Oy, two subsidiaries owned equally by Rauma and

Hollming.

South Korean Yards Record

Order Book Upturn During

Third Quarter Of Year

A 12.8 percent increase in its or- der book during the third quarter of the year was recorded by the South

Korean shipbuilding industry, con- solidating its position in the second slot worldwide.

The number of contracts awarded in the three months to September 30 outweighed vessel deliveries by 890,000 gt, taking the Korean yards' overall workload to 7.85 million gt.

The South Korea upturn in busi- ness corresponds closely to the glo- bal increase in newbuilding con- struction. New orders reported to have been received during the quar- ter totaled 5.0 million gt, almost 1.1 million gt in excess of commissionings in the correspond- ing period.

Of the total contractual activity,

Japan accounted for 15.1 million gt or 37.2 percent, representing a slight reduction in both percentage and

January, 1992 tonnage terms. The industry in Ja- pan, which continues to invest heavily in its production facilities with an eye to the requirements of double-hull crude carriers and other types, dominates the tanker sector.

In this category, Japanese build- ers hold contracts for 9.6 million gt of the 20.7 million gt worldwide.

South Korea's increased competi- tiveness, however, is reflected in the uplift in its oil tanker workload to 4.5 million gt.

By far the single largest field of new construction activity is tanker tonnage, representing 51 percent of orders in hand throughout the world.

The higher level of bulk ship or- ders was one of the main contribu- tors to the third quarter's increase in business. The aggregate bulker order book grew by 1.1 million gt to 6.6 million gt, or 16.3 percent of the total at the close of September. Its proportional standing three months earlier had been 13.9 percent.

The relatively few advances achieved elsewhere were overshad- owed by the surge in South Korea's workload.

Durable Thermoplastic

Key Component Of

Offshore Umbilicals

Long considered "lifelines" in the oil and gas exploration industry, umbilicals are the conduits between offshore platforms and the subsea wellheads. These conduits trans- port hydraulics to subsea destina- tions, thus monitoring the control of wellhead valves. Because of this operations function, umbilicals are designed to meet exacting require- ments which must with stand tough subsea conditions. For Multiflex,

Inc., Magnolia, Texas, a leading manufacturer of hose bundles and umbilicals worldwide, the only ma- terial that satisfies particular appli- cation requirements for umbilical core tubes is Rilsan Polyamide 11.

Safety, durability and corrosion resistance are perhaps the most important factors in the manufac- ture of umbilicals. With an eye to- ward using superior materials for all applications, Multiflex has earned a dominant position in the offshore umbilical industry. Using only the highest quality materials are part of the reason for Multiflex's long list of satisfied customers, said

Brad Jeter, project manager for

Multiflex. "Whatever the applica- tion, we specify the highest quality materials available for our custom- ers. Polyamide 11 is an important part of our products, and we don't compromise safety or durability with a lesser thermoplastic."

Rilsan Polyamide 11 is produced by ATOCHEM North America, Inc., a $1.5 billion diversified chemicals manufacturer headquartered in

Philadelphia, Pa. The company was formed December 31, 1989, as re- sult of a merger between

ATOCHEM, Inc., M&T Chemicals

Inc. and Pennwalt Corporation.

ATOCHEM North America is an affiliate of ATOCHEM S.A., a $10 billion chemicals manufacturer, which is part of the ELF Group, headquartered in Paris, France.

For detailed information on

Rilsan Polyamide 11 uses in subsea applications,

Circle 51 on Reader Service Card 41

Maritime Reporter

First published in 1881 Maritime Reporter is the world's largest audited circulation publication serving the global maritime industry.