Danish Contingent Strong At OE2001
The joint Danish stand at Offshore Europe 2001 (OE2001) brings together 21 Danish manufacturers and suppliers of a multiple range of products and services for the international marine and offshore industry. The companies constitute Offshore Denmark - The Marine and Offshore Technology Group, which forms the framework for Danish turnkey projects and innovative solutions for customers world wide. Three Danish companies in particular, Orskov Steel Shipyard, MAN B&W A/S Alpha Diesel, and Aalborg Industries A/S, were featured on Stand No 959/859.
Orskov Steel Shipyard (www.orskov.dk) is a full service ship builder with conversion and repair facilities in two floating docks and two dry docks up to 705 x 111 ft. (215 x 34 m), strategically located at the northern tip of the European continent, with very short deviation from the North Sea and the Baltic area. Orskov has completed contracts for multifunctional AHTS Vessels, container and offshore vessels and LPG carriers.
MAN B&W (www.manbw.dk) is the total supplier of auxiliary propulsion systems for two-stroke engine plants, four stroke engine powers for 800-7,680 kW (1,090-10,400 bhp) per engine and CP propeller systems. This June MAN B&W has been selected as the supplier of their innovative high-tech seven cylinder GenSets each delivering 1,400 kW at 100 rpm, 50 Hz, contracted by DFDS Tor Line at the Flensburger Schiffbau-Gesellschaft.
Aalborg Industries (www.aalborgindustries.
dk) is the manufacturer of boilers for steam, hot-water or thermal fluid and combustion equipment, specially designed to meet the requirements onboard FPSOs, FSOs, and rigs. Aalborg Industries has just signed new contracts for boilers and combustion equipment worth $10.5 million from among others Korean shipyards.
For information on the companies, circle the appropriate number on the reader service card in this edition, or visit www.maritimereporterinfo.com
Other stories from August 2001 issue
Content
- First Wove Marine Files Reorganization Plan page: 36A
- Danish Contingent Strong At OE2001 page: 36C
- Containership Volume To Slow page: 36D
- Hempel Celebrates 50 Years page: 36G
- SSPC 2001 Set For November in Atlanta page: 36E
- Janet M. McAllister Welcomed To NY page: 4
- Reefership Within A Containership page: 8
- Innovation on the fjords page: 9
- Shipping Internet: Where next? page: 12
- Mahachai Dockyard: Freezers for Southern Waters page: 14
- Rodriquez Cantieri Navali Delivers Newest Fast Ferry page: 14
- Elliott Bay Develops Eco-Tourism Vessel page: 15
- Bollinger Delivers 145-ft. Supply/Utility Boat To Bordelon page: 16
- Gladding-Hearn Delivers Cape Fear Pilot Boat page: 18
- Shipbuilding R&D Supported page: 19
- Top Navy Officer Supports DD-21 page: 21
- Bollinger Incat USA - Marking Its Territory page: 24
- Ready to Burn: Fast Ferry Market Looks Good page: 27
- Palmer Johnson Teams Up With Atlantic Dry Dock For SuperYacht Refit Facility page: 29
- U.S. Report America's Cruise Line Faces Delivery Delays, Job Cuts page: 30
- USN Confident Of Raising Sunken Fishing Vessel page: 31
- Detyens Concludes Largest U.S. Conversion page: 32
- IZAR Lands FPSO Order page: 35
- ABB's Compact Pod Makes Mark In $42M Deal page: 35
- Offshore Inland: Poised To Pounce On Offshore Upturn page: 36
- Izar Ferrol Repairs Eight Vessels At Once page: 38
- Loose Cable Contributed To Crane Collapse page: 40
- Raising the Standard for Bulk Carrier Cranes page: 41
- Belotti Handling Reinvents The Reach Stacker Machine page: 41
- Chartco: The Best of Both Worlds page: 42
- U.S. ENC Availability Starts To Gain Speed page: 42
- Kelvin Hughes Bridge Chosen For Queen Mary 2 page: 45
- Raytheon To Supply T45 With IBS, Nav Package page: 46
- RIB Technology Makes Stronger, Faster Boats page: 49
- Zodiac: From Flying Machines to RIBs page: 51
- Willard Marine, MetalCraft Inc. Launch Hybrid Aluminum/FRP RIB page: 52
- Type 45 Destroyer Build Plans Modified page: 53
- UK Manufacturers Seek To Forge New Partnerships page: 54