Robert Allan Ltd

  • Robert Allan Ltd. is a consulting naval architectural firm, established in Vancouver, Canada in 1930. Mike Fitzpatrick has been a driving force in the company’s growth since joining the firm in 2003. As a key member of the initial employee ownership group, he was named president and CEO in 2015, responsible for corporate direction, business development, management of senior project managers, and project priorities, schedules and profitability. Fitzpatrick is a 1995 graduate of the University of New South Wales in Australia, with a Bachelor of Engineering in naval architecture. Prior to joining RAL, he worked as a naval architect at InCat Designs in Sydney Australia.

    As tug designs continue to evolve, what are some of the key ways that Robert Allan Ltd. is helping to make these vessels safer, greener and more cost efficient?
    Robert Allan Ltd. has made a considerable investment in the development of some very sophisticated design tools – in particular computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and finite element analysis (FEA). CFD allows us to accurately predict the characteristics of a vessel in ways that are not possible with conventional empirical methods. CFD also help us design hull shapes that are more efficient and therefore have better fuel economy. FEA allows us to calculate the stress in high load areas, making them stronger without excess weight. We also work closely equipment manufacturers to integrate the latest in new technologies into our designs, enabling customers to be assured that their vessels are utilizing the latest in technologies and fully meet all their expected performance requirements.

    Robert Allan Ltd. has made considerable investments in CFD, significantly enhancing the firm’s design capabilities. (Image: Robert Allan Ltd.)

    How do you see the future for remotely operated, automated and autonomous workboats? Please describe Robert Allan Ltd.’s efforts and goals on this front.
    We expect to see interest in remotely operated workboats increase for hazardous applications like firefighting and for tug applications that involve higher levels of risk to crews today. This includes bow tug operations with ships moving at speeds over 5 knots, and tanker hold-back operations which can be very demanding on crews in uncomfortable sea conditions for hours on end. With more specialist vendors of control and communication systems for work boats having entered the market over the last few years, there are more options than there once was for our clients who may have their own supplier preferences or working relationships for these crucial systems. As naval architects, we can focus on system integration and designing the best possible physical workboat platform, taking full advantage of the space that becomes available from not having crew on board. We are taking the opportunity rethink arrangements for equipment and propulsion to improve performance and reduce size. We believe that the best way to capitalize on the potential advantages of remote operation is to tailor a workboat design as closely as possible to suit the client’s mission and business goals. In other words, the design should be mission-driven, not generic. This is second nature for us since we have a history of customizing our workboat designs to suit our clients, so we are simply carrying this approach forward with our uncrewed designs, but can now do so to an even greater extent.

    RAL's crewless RAmora concept (Image: Robert Allan Ltd.)

    Robert Allan Ltd. has been involved in several LNG and hybrid tug and towboat projects globally. From your perspective, why has the uptake of these technologies been slower in North America compared to other regions? Do you see a shift happening in North America?
    It’s worth making the distinction between LNG tugs and hybrid tugs in answering this question because the drivers are slightly different. When it comes to LNG as fuel, Europe and Norway took an early lead because of the NOx tax imposed in 2008 and initiatives like the Norwegian NOx Fund to support low NOx solutions like LNG as fuel. This was not the case in the U.S. at the time. Although LNG was attractive as a lower cost fuel than diesel, with tugs the business case for choosing LNG was not always clear due to high capital cost premium for LNG systems unless the annual fuel consumption was exceptionally high. The relatively large space required to accommodate cryogenic storage tanks can also work against LNG where a highly compact tug is called for. While the uptake of LNG in North America has been slower that other regions, the adoption of LNG as fuel on workboats has also been slower than expected globally. There are probably two main reasons. A few years ago, LNG was one of the few options to meet the stringent IMO Tier III NOx emissions limits in emissions in Emission Control Areas (ECAs), however engine manufactures now offer SCR-based solutions for conventional diesel engine that can work out to be more economical and space efficient. The lower price of oil has also reduced the economic case for turning to LNG solely as a means to reduce cost. That said, LNG remains attractive as a relatively inexpensive, clean-burning fuel and we expect to continue designing LNG tugs, especially for ports and terminals where LNG is readily available.

    When it comes to hybrid powering systems on tugs and workboats, the capital cost premium is also such that the business case tends to depend on incentives like those behind the first North American hybrid tug, the Robert Allan Ltd.-designed Carolyn Dorothy in 2009, where funding from government and port sources was available to reduce fuel consumption and emissions. Today, in a more general sense, we expect to see hybrid tugs playing a role wherever a high value is placed on reducing environmental footprint in a local context. One recent example is the Swedish Port of Luleå for whom we designed the new 36-meter icebreaking Vilja tug. Of course, environmental footprint may also take into account underwater radiated noise URN) and its effects on marine life. Hybrids with batteries allow quiet running on batteries alone, at least for some period of time during operations in environmentally sensitive areas. We are already working on low carbon designs of battery electric tugs and pilot boats for operations where shore charging from renewables is possible. It is difficult to predict the number of hybrid tugs for the North American market, or any other market for the time being, since the demand is not driven by economics alone, but by the value placed on reducing environmental footprint by a given operator, port or government and the incentives or regulations that prevail locally.

    The first North American hybrid tug, the Robert Allan Ltd.-designed Carolyn Dorothy (Photo: Robert Allan Ltd.)

    What is your top goal as president and CEO, and what is being done to help achieve it?
    My primary goal as president and CEO of Robert Allan Ltd. is to preside over our 100th anniversary party in 2030. Not as president anymore because I will certainly have handed over the reins to the next generation by then if I have done my job properly. The 10 shareholder employees that bought the company from [chairman Robert G. “Rob” Allan] in 2008 consider ourselves to be the fourth generation in the Robert Allan Ltd. storyline even if we don’t share the same bloodlines as Rob, his father and grandfather. We have hopefully put the company on a path to maintain independent internal ownership for several more generations to come. A fifth generation of employee ownership is now already well established at Robert Allan Ltd., and I am highly confident that they will take the company onwards and upwards long after I have stepped aside.

    What do you count as your top challenge, and what is being done to address it?
    The top challenge I face really depends on which day of the week it is because it is an ever-changing landscape. Keeping our employees engaged and rewarded in a competitive international business environment is near the top of my list most days, but so is strategic planning to maintain our position as the leading international designer of small commercial workboats. Solving the latter of these challenges generally also takes care of the former. Staying at the forefront of our market segment requires continuous improvement so we invest heavily in our internal processes, R&D and the tools needed to support this improvement. There aren’t many naval architecture firms specializing in relatively small workboats that can afford to invest in valuable infrastructure like a million-dollar CFD like we have done, so we leverage this advanced analytical capability to maintain our current strong position.

    “The RAstar 3800-DF delivered to the Port of Ningbo in China is probably the most representative of our status as one of the leading innovators in the tug design world. That the tug was built in China for a Chinese operator is a testament to the value that we provide our clients.” - Mike Fitzpatrick (Photo: Robert Allan Ltd.)

    How has the coronavirus pandemic materially impacted your business to date?
    The coronavirus pandemic has surprisingly not had a significant material impact on our business so far. We had a couple of projects canceled in the initial few weeks when the uncertainty levels were high but have since settled into a nearly normal workload. We consider ourselves to be very lucky that our profession lends itself well to a remote working environment. Even before the current crisis, we already had a number of employees scattered about the globe working remotely, so we already had the computer infrastructure in place to allow all of our employees to work efficiently in a remote environment. Incredibly, all of our good shipyard clients around the world have found ways to continue production safely and efficiently in the midst of this pandemic.

    Please describe how you came to a career in the maritime industry. When did you first know you wanted to become a naval architect?
    I studied aeronautical engineering in Canada when I finished high school in the early ’80s but a passion for sailing and travelling got in the way of my studies after the first year and led me astray for most of a decade. I went back to university to study naval architecture in Australia in my late 20s. That first engineering calculus course after 10 years out of school almost ended my academic comeback but I managed to struggle through somehow. Life is (hopefully) full of impactful moments where you can choose one path versus another, and so I am grateful that my younger self managed to stick it out as a mature student.

    What advice would you give a young naval architect just entering the industry?
    I think working in a design office is an excellent professional environment but it is good to get some shipyard experience first if you can. It’s hard to grasp the implications of a poor structural detail you’ve drawn up on a computer if you don’t have a production team next door threatening to make you weld it up yourself. Rule number one for a professional engineer is to never pretend to know more than you actually do.

    (Photo: Robert Allan Ltd.)

  • The Company: With about 82 employees, Robert Allan Ltd. is Canada’s most senior consulting Naval Architectural firm, established in Vancouver, B.C. in 1930. The company has earned an international reputation for innovative, successful designs for a wide range of ships and has been a leader in creating

  • Being based just across the open border between Canada and America since 1930, Robert Allan Ltd. has developed a deep understanding of the American market and just how our ship designs can be tailored to suit our neighbors’ requirements.   America is unique in many ways. The current designs of American

  • (604) 736-9566    Email: [email protected] Website: www.ral.ca President: Ken Harford Executive Chairman of the Board: Robert G. Allan The Company: Robert Allan Ltd. is Canada’s oldest private consulting Naval Architectural firm. Established in Vancouver in 1930, the company first produced designs for the

  • Prominent on this year's prestigous MarineNews MN100 list is Robert Allan Ltd.  Robert Allan Ltd. is a recognized world leader in innovative Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering with a particular focus on harbor and seagoing tugs, shallow draft towing vessels and fireboats for major world ports. Robert

  • As the 90th anniversary of Robert Allan Ltd. approaches it is quite timely to address the development of Robert Allan’s designs as the years passed by and technology changed.When the first Robert Allan came out to Canada at the end of the First War he was a trained naval architect experienced in the

  • the new aluminum crewboat Khulood to Mutawa Marine of Abu Dhabi, for service in the offshore oil industry in the Arabian Gulf. Designed by Robert Allan Ltd., Naval Architects of Vancouver, the new vessel is the first newbuilding in welded aluminium built by Dubai Drydocks, and represents the first

  • ordered delivery of a 2,560-bhp ship-berthing tug from J.M. Martinac Shipbuilding Corporation of Tacoma, Wash. The new tug, designed by Robert Allan Ltd. of Vancouver, B.C., Canada, is scheduled for completion in September 1989, and will be put into service docking ships in the Port of Honolulu

  • FiFi1 capability, pumping capacity of 2400 m3/hour and with optional foam capabilities.   Vancouver based naval architects and marine engineers Robert Allan Ltd., and international marine technology specialist Kongsberg Maritime are collaborating on the development of a radically new remotely-operated

  • Robert Allan founded Robert Allan Ltd. in 1930 when Allan commenced private practice as a consulting Naval Architect after serving as Technical Manager of a local major shipyard. In the 90 years that have passed, the organization has evolved from a one-man shop to a global powerhouse in the business of

  • to the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans, following a successful and extensive series of trials. The vessel was built to a design by Robert Allan Ltd., Vancouver, originally prepared in 1984, and later updated prior to the awarding of a construction contract in 1988. The R.B. Young will

  • Charles H. Cates X to C.H. Cates & Sons Ltd., North Vancouver, B.C. Based on a design by Vancouver-based naval architecture and marine engineering firm Robert Allan Ltd., the Charles H. Cates X has a molded breadth of 24 feet 2 inches, depth of 9 feet 9 inches and extreme draft of 10 feet. Her propulsion

  • MN May-25#48 .com  (906) 863-5553
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    May 2025 - Marine News page: 48

    .com (504) 780-8100 29 MMC International www.mmcintl.com (516) 239-7339 C4 R.W. Fernstrum & Company www.fernstrum.com (906) 863-5553 33 Robert Allan Ltd. www.ral.ca Please visit our website 11 Schoellhorn Albrecht www.schoellhorn-albrecht.com (314) 965-3339 25 Society of Accredited Marine

  • MN May-25#44  
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    segment. the RASCAL is designed to ? ll an emerging niche in sec- Successful sea trials were recently performed at the San ondary ports. Design by Robert Allan Ltd. and powered by Diego, US-based shipbuilder on the ? rst pair of davits de- Caterpillar C32 T4 engines driving Berg Propulsion MTA livered

  • MN May-25#28 ,  tor tug design from Robert Allan Ltd., built at yards)
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    in the George M and May Louise-with the Z-Tech 30-80 Trac- barge market has sellers investigating potential divestitures, tor tug design from Robert Allan Ltd., built at yards in and Kirby believes the best use of their cash at the mo- the U.S. Gulf and classed by ABS as Low Emission Ves- Suderman &

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    .com (906) 863-5553 23 Resolve Marine Group www.resolvemarine.com (907) 581-1400 35 Ribcraft USA, LLC www.ribcraftusa.com (781) 639-9065 41 Robert Allan Ltd. www.ral.ca Visit us online 15 Schoellhorn Albrecht www.schoellhorn-albrecht.com (314) 965-3339 13 SHIPPINGInsight 2024 www.SHIPPINGInsight

  • MR Sep-24#48  us online
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    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .www.rixindustries.com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Please visit us online 3 . . . . . .Robert Allan Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .www.ral.ca . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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    .com (906) 863-5553 7 Resolve Marine Group www.resolvemarine.com (907) 581-1400 21 Ribcraft USA, LLC www.ribcraftusa.com (781) 639-9065 33 Robert Allan Ltd. www.ral.ca Please visit our website 13 Scania, USA Inc. www.scaniausa.com (210) 403-0007 9 Schoellhorn Albrecht www.schoellhorn-albrecht

  • MN Aug-24#40  SRP 510 thrusters.
Robert Allan Ltd
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    (3,500 Saltchuk Marine’s long-term ? eet re- hp @ 1,800 rpm) and Schottel Rud- newal project, with the new tugs set derPropeller SRP 510 thrusters. Robert Allan Ltd LA Port Police Vessel performance characteristics beyond will be ? tted with comprehensive ? re sup- what was initially achieved with the All

  • MR Jun-24#43  tugboats, designed by Robert Allan Ltd., are the ?  rst)
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    Expansion Project, at Sanmar Shipyards Altinova in Yalova, Turkiye. The tug is expected to be delivered by mid-2025. The tugboats, designed by Robert Allan Ltd., are the ? rst of their kind to be powered by methanol and are engineered to provide the high bollard pull required for the Trans Moun- tain

  • MR May-24#59  fuel.
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    decarbonization by using am- Camperdown is based on the exclusive-to-Sanmar RAstar monia as the cleaner alternative to conventional fuel. 2900SX from Robert Allan Ltd., primarily intended for demanding AET also signed the Shipbuilding Contracts escort operations in exposed areas. (SBC) for these two vessels

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    .com (504) 780-8100 C4 R.W. Fernstrum & Company www.fernstrum.com (906) 863-5553 3 Raymarine www.raymarine.com/commercial (603) 864-9668 25 Robert Allan Ltd. www.ral.ca Please visit our website 15 Scania, USA Inc. www.scaniausa.com (210) 403-0007 13 Schoellhorn Albrecht www.schoellhorn-albrecht

  • MN Apr-24#28  escort tugs, with design by Robert Allan, Ltd. to be 
built)
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    . Master Boat Builders is also constructing more conven- tional vessels. In mid-2023, it announced an order for two 92-foot escort tugs, with design by Robert Allan, Ltd. to be built for Moran Towing, based in Connecticut. Though us- ing conventional fuel, the boats will feature Caterpillar 3516 EPA Tier

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    863-5553 53 Rhotheta International Inc www.rhothetaint.com/marine (954) 495-8700 31 Ribcraft USA LLC. www.ribcraftusa.com (781) 639-9065 41 Robert Allan Ltd. www.ral.ca Visit us online 21 Schoellhorn Albrecht www.schoellhorn-albrecht.com (314) 965-3339 29 SEATAC Marine www.seatacmarine.com

  • MN Nov-23#27  emissions. Tier 4  a Robert Allan Ltd. design, Spartan)
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    EPA rules, promulgating fur- Master Boat Builders had delivered two ship escort tugs with ther reductions of NOx and particulate emissions. Tier 4 a Robert Allan Ltd. design, Spartan and Titan, to Seabulk plant technology is typically accomplished using a selective Towing. The vessels, with Berg Z Drive azimuth

  • MN Nov-23#13  to me.” temis, a new Robert Allan Ltd. RApport 2500 tug)
    November 2023 - Marine News page: 13

    to try to develop a better product, this was all At the end of October, DMI performed sea trials for Ar- super attractive to me.” temis, a new Robert Allan Ltd. RApport 2500 tug for Br- Manning said his attention to the relationships side of usco, to be chartered by Crowley. It is also currently build- the

  • MR Sep-23#64  946-3980
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    . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .www.youngusa.com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .(231) 946-3980 3 . . . . . .Robert Allan Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .www.ral.ca . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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    863-5553 41 Rhotheta International Inc www.rhothetaint.com/marine (954) 495-8700 31 Ribcraft USA LLC. www.ribcraftusa.com (781) 639-9065 27 Robert Allan Ltd. www.ral.ca Visit us online 13 Scania, USA Inc. www.scaniausa.com (210) 403-0007 19 SEATAC Marine www.seatacmarine.com (206) 767-6000 33

  • MN Aug-23#43  from shore charging fa-
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    at Kitimat, the har- yards in Turkey, the vessel is the ? rst in a series of three bor tugs will be able to recharge from shore charging fa- Robert Allan Ltd. designed ElectRA 2800 battery electric cilities at their berths between dockings, resulting in near- harbor tugs being constructed for HaiSea

  • MR Apr-23#19 , with a design from Robert Allan Ltd. 
The message from)
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    carbon ered a hybrid (Caterpillar diesels and generators) tug to Seab- emissions in a particular circumstance. ulk Towing, with a design from Robert Allan Ltd. The message from Bomgardner and Cummins was that ac- The vessel, Spartan, which can operate using the Tier 4 tual readings, rather than formula-base

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29 Robert Allan Ltd.    www.ral.ca  Visit)
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    R.W. Fernstrum & Company www.fernstrum.com (906) 863-5553 41 Rhotheta International Inc www.rhothetaint.com/marine (954) 495-8700 29 Robert Allan Ltd. www.ral.ca Visit us online 11 Seawork www.seawork.com 44 1329 825 335 35 Society of Accredited Marine Surveyors www.marinesurvey.org

  • MN Feb-23#42  comprises a pair of Cat-
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    on the main deck, while two cabins for four crew members are located on the lower deck. The main propulsion for the tug comprises a pair of Cat- Robert Allan Ltd. erpillar 3512E, EPA Tier 4 certi? ed diesel engines, each rated 2,213 bHP at 1,600 rpm, and driving a Schottel SRP Coden, Ala. shipbuilder

  • MR Nov-22#54  
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    lithium-ion energy storage systems, making them 100% electric and zero-emissions ships. They will be charged by British Columbia’s Image courtesy Robert Allan Ltd. “With an overall length of 23 meters and a 70 tons bollard pull performance, the tugs will be highly capable of de- livering services to all

  • MN Nov-22#49 .”
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    pro? le as ideal to capitalize on hybrid technology tugboat, Spartan, built by Master Boat Build- for those long transits.” ers in Coden, Ala. The Robert Allan Ltd.-designed RApport 3000 vessel T Seabulk has already seen good results from Spartan is 98 feet long with a beam of 43 feet and draft of 18.5

  • MN Nov-22#48  Master Boat Builders
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    Feature Great Vessels of 2022 Seabulk SPARTAN Owner: Seabulk Builder: Master Boat Builders Designer: Robert Allan, Ltd. 48 | MN November 2022

  • MN Oct-22#80  visit our website
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    C4 R.W. Fernstrum & Company www.fernstrum.com (906) 863-5553 C3 Renewable Energy Group www.regi.com/endura-fuels Please visit our website 49 Robert Allan Ltd. www.ral.ca Visit us online 15 Scania, USA Inc. www.scaniausa.com (210) 403-0007 49 Society of Accredited Marine Surveyors www.marinesurvey