Page 42: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (November 1997)
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EUROPORT '97 — BENELUX REVIEW
BENELUX: Carving IPs Niche by Alan Thorpe, international editor
The strengthening of the U.K. pound this past summer enabled
Holland and Belgium to become far more competitive than in previous years, especially in the ship repair market.
Holland remains one of the largest shipbuilding nations to remain in northern Europe, offer- ing many yards specializing in smaller ships, ferries and dredgers.
The one large shipbuilding com- plex in Belgium — Boelwerf — has remained closed for more than one year, and it appears that it has vir- tually no chance of re-opening.
The Dutch shipbuilding industry has taken a new look with ship- building and engineering group
IHC Caland, launching a takeover bid for fellow shipbuilder Van der
Giessen de Noord — the country's largest shipbuilding complex — with the aim of creating a north
European shipbuilding group active in the offshore and mer- chant shipping industries.
IHC has made a public bid for all outstanding shares of Van der
Giessen at around $155 million, with the deal expected to be com- pleted in the fourth quarter of this year.
Both companies are listed on the
Amsterdam Stock Exchange. IHC has specialized in serving the oil & gas and dredging industries, while
Van der Giessen has made its name in the more traditional ship- building sector, where it is notori- ously difficult to turn a profit.
Currently on order at IHC are dredgers for Jan de Nul, Antwerp
Dredging, Gambia, Dredging
Corporation of India, HAM and
Van Oord.
Meanwhile, during late May this year, Van der Giessen was awarded a major offshore newbuilding con- tract from Bermuda's Toisa Ltd., involving the construction of a 372- ft. (113.6 m) multi-purpose offshore support vessel (OSV), with options for additional vessels.
The vessel, to be delivered by late
July 1998, has a contract value of $35 million.
The new ship will have accommo- dations for 70 in 40 cabins, two large moonpools, clear deck area of 1,200 cu. m., and it will be fitted with a 100-ton capacity offshore crane and a helicopter landing deck suitable for Super Puma heli- copters.
A diesel-electric propulsion sys- tem (comprising four Stork
Wartsila diesel engines type 9L26 of 2,800 bhp at 900 rpm each) will drive two fixed-pitch, variable speed, azimuth stern thrusters (2,200 kW/900 rpm) and three for- ward tunnel thrusters (1,050 kW/1,200 rpm each).
A dynamic positioning system will be fitted to provide the ship with the highest dynamic position- ing classification standards.
The vessel has a trial speed at design draft of about 13.9 knots with two azimuthing thrusters, each unit developing 2,200 kW.
Toisa Ltd's OSV main particulars
Length, o.a 372 ft. (113.6 m)
Length, b.p 352.6 ft. (107.5 m)
Breadth, molded 72.2 ft. (22 m)
Depth, to main deck .31.2 ft. (9.5 m)
Draft, design 20.7 ft. (6.3 m)
Draft, scantling 21.6 ft. (6.8 m)
Deadweight, design 5,335t
Deadweight, scantling 6,650t
Workdeck area 1,475 cu. m.
Speed 13.9 knots
Newbuilding orders recently com- pleted at Van der Giessen include a two-ship deal with German ferry operator DFO (Deutsche
Fahrgesellschaft Ostsee GmbH), calling for two 15,000-grt double- ended ferries of 466 ft. (142 m) long and approximately 82 ft. (25 m) wide.
The vessels, named Schleswig
Holstein and Deutschland, provide space for up to 285 cars or trucks, and approximately 120 cars, with an IC3 train, can be transported on the vessels without any on-shore shunting maneuver being neces- sary.
The first in the series, was hand- ed over to DFO in May, and the sec- ond was handed over last month.
The yard is also carrying out an order for Isle of Man Steam Packet, involving a 407 x 77 ft. (124 x 23.4 m) passenger/RoRo ferry, expected to be delivered in July, 1998.
Another Rotterdam-based ship- builder, YVC Ysselwerf BV, Capelle a/d Ijssel, has also had a full order- book recently, winning two con- tracts, one comprising of a 10,400 dwt chemical tanker for owners
Tank Africa, and the other a fish factory trawler for Jaczon sub- sidiary, SARL Klipper, France.
Tank Africa's chemical tanker main particulars
Length, o.a. . . . . .393.7 ft. (120 m)
Breadth, molded ..63.3 ft. (19.3 m)
Breadth, extreme . ,63.7 ft. (19.5 m)
Depth, moulded . . . ,42.7 ft. (13 m)
Draft, design . . . . .25.6 ft. (7.8 m)
Deadweight . . . 9,500 t
Summer draft . . . .27.2 ft. (8.3 m)
Heavy fuel oil . 980 cu. m.
Marine diesel oil 125 cu. m.
Fresh water . . . 150 cu. m.
Speed 14.5 knots
A dredger under repair in Shipdock Amsterdam. 40 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News