Staten Island

  • It takes a thick skin to live in New York City, let alone to run its Staten Island Ferry service. James C. DeSimone, Deputy Commissioner, Ferry Division, New York City Department of Transportation, has been charged with running the ferry service for the last 16 years. We met with him for his insights on the challenges of keeping the iconic ferry running safely and efficiently.

    Jim DeSimone has led a maritime life, with his time equally split between the private and public sectors. His maritime affiliation is literally in his blood, as his father Guy J. DeSimone was a 1936 graduate of and long-term, highly regarded professor at the New York State Merchant Marine Academy – which later became SUNY Maritime College – in the Bronx. In fact, Guy J. DeSimone is a SUNY Maritime Heritage Hall Inductee, credited with transitioning a nautical school into a fully accredited college. “We grew up on the campus,” said DeSimone, “around boats and on the water, so I always kind of figured it was my natural career path.”

    After graduating SUNY Maritime, DeSimone sailed mostly on tankers, serving in nearly every capacity from Able Seaman through Master. He and his wife were enjoying the commercial shipping life living in Florida when the opportunity came to return to his roots as the captain of the training ship and the commandant of the cadets at the Maritime College in the Bronx, NY. While he enjoyed his tenure helping to shape the next generation of mariners, after 10 years in academia, DeSimone was itching to get back to the commercial side, where he landed first as a senior vice president with Great Lakes Towing, followed by a stint as a Vice President of-operations for NY Water Taxis. Then, unexpectedly, the position with Staten Island Ferries opened up in the wake of the most significant accident in Staten Island Ferry history, the ferry Andrew J. Barberi allision of October 2003, an accident which included a number of fatalities and serious injuries. “For the city to go outside the system to hire was huge,” said DeSimone. “At the time, both the mayor and city council had a strong mandate to improve ferry operations, and to make changes in the wake of this accident.”

    RADM Michael Alfultis, President, SUNY Maritime College, with Jim’s brother Rich DeSimone and Jim DeSimone. Photo: Jim DeSimone By the Numbers
    The Staten Island Ferry is an iconic part of New York City’s history and future, carrying more than 25.2 million passengers on a five-mile, 25-minute trip per year, for free, courtesy of about 40,404 trips made annually between Whitehall Street in lower Manhattan to the St. George Ferry Terminal on Staten Island. The system operates eight vessels on the route, from the largest, 5,300-passenger Barberi class vessels (2), down to the smaller 1,100-passenger Austin class vessels (2), with a trio of 4,400-passenger Molinari class vessels; and the 3,000-passenger, 1965-built Kennedy. (There are currently three 4,500-passenger Ollis class ferries under construction, with the first to deliver in the Autumn of 2020).

    Helping to ensure the vessels and terminals keep operating 24/7/365 is a workforce of about 650, including 400 vessel personnel; 100 in maintenance covering all trades with the balance in administration and terminal staff.

    The Staten Island Ferry is run by the City of New York for one pragmatic reason: To transport Staten Islanders to and from Manhattan. “In the private sector, businesses exist for one purpose: to make a profit … and there’s nothing wrong with that,” said DeSimone. “Government exist to provide services…By and large it was a pretty good system, but it was somewhat stuck in the past technologically,” said DeSimone. “They didn’t have speed logs, ECDIS systems and the like on the ferries, and they certainly didn’t have a Safety Management System.”

    “The rule of thumb is if the cost of a life extension is 51% of the newbuild cost, you build new. If it’s 49% or less, you extend the life of the current vessel. When we did our evaluation, our life-extension costs were close to 70%, and with passenger demand forecasts, the decision was easy (to build new).” James C. DeSimone, Deputy Commissioner, Ferry Division, New York City Department of Transportation, Staten Island Ferries. Photo: Greg Trauthwein A Time for Change
    The October 15, 2003 incident provided a wake-up call for the ferry service, and DeSimone and his crew set about making changes, from the foundation of a new Safety Management System that took nearly 18 months to devise and implement, to a top to bottom review of maritime training and education.

    “When I started here (training) was based on mentoring and shadowing,” said DeSimone. “Since then, all of the training, mentoring and shadowing has been standardized. Today we have three mates that do all of the training for new marine employees to ensure that training is as consistent as we can possibly make it.”

    Standardized training for Captains and Assistant Captains is docking in every slip – from Manhattan to Staten Island to the organization’s maintenance piers – on every class of ferry and then signed off on by the captains.

    In addition, Staten Island Ferries has worked with Marine Learning Systems on a blended learning and training platform for new deckhands and mates.

    Staten Island Ferries owns and operates its own simulator, with another due to enter service soon, that is geared toward Bridge Resource Management (BRM) and ECDIS training. It seeks to maximize its training return by, for example, outfitting the new simulator with the actual equipment that will be featured on the new-builds. It also sends crew to SUNY Maritime for training as needed, with MITAGS carrying the heavier workload for Staten Island captain and assistant captain training courses in and out of the simulator.

    “MITAGS has the Navigation Skills Assessment Program (NSAP), with all of our operating officers participating,” said DeSimone. In today’s world, before anyone gets moved up to an assistant captain or captain, they must complete the NSAP program in addition to evaluations from other captains and administration.  

    “When it comes to promoting a captain and assessing their skills, human evaluation is subjective and some of that’s ok,” said DeSimone. “But we were looking for a solution that would be as objective as possible.” NSAP, combined with human evaluation, provided the solution.

    In tandem with the design and implementation of the Safety Management System were several additional changes, including:

    A reshuffle the interior hierarchy to make it look and act like a commercial shipping company, creating roles such as Director of Operations, Director of Engineering and Director of Safety & Security.

    Introducing a computer-based maintenance and inventory system. “When I joined in 2004, Staten Island Ferries did not have any engineering service agreements. Today we have on-call engineering service contracts for the boats and the terminals.”

    The creation of a new security plan. “Staten Island Ferries is considered one of the highest profile ‘soft’ maritime targets in the U.S.,” said DeSimone. Staten Island Ferries is also unique in that it owns both the vessels and the terminal operations, so “our security plan is a hybrid plan, with combined vessel and terminal facilities security.”

    The OLLIS Class: is a new class of vessels being built for Staten Island Ferries by Eastern Shipbuilding Group. Photos: Staten Island Ferries/ESG

    The OLLIS Class: is a new class of vessels being built for Staten Island Ferries by Eastern Shipbuilding Group. Photos: Staten Island Ferries/ESG

    Building New Ferries
    The decision to build new vessels is never taken lightly due to the tremendous upfront and life-cycle costs of an asset that is designed to last more than 30 years, or in the case of Staten Island Ferries 40 to 50 years, while operating in the harsh marine environment.
    “The rule of thumb is if the cost of a life extension is 51% of the newbuild cost, you build new. If it’s 49% or less, you extend the life of the current vessel. When we did our evaluation, our life-extension costs were close to 70%, and with passenger demand forecasts, the decision was easy (to build new).”
     
    Currently Staten Island Ferries has a trio of 4,500-passenger, double-ended newbuilds with cycloidal propulsion under construction at Eastern Shipbuilding in Florida, with the first scheduled for delivering later in 2020, the last for delivery in early 2022.  “We’re big fans of Voith (cycloidal propulsion) here,” said DeSimone. “It’s a great system. My first exposure to it was the first ship I sailed on when I graduated Maritime, a research ship.” Today the ferry system operates four vessels with the Voith system, the Barbieri class and Austin class. When making the decision on how to propel the new Ollis class of vessels, DeSimone and his team came in with an open mind knowing that maneuverability and reliability are the top two factors, and the decision was an easy one based on a comprehensive propulsion trade off study and decades of experience. “The Voith units have a very high level of reliability, and the maneuverability is unsurpassed, both of which is really important here in New York Harbor” said DeSimone.
      “The Voith units have a very high level of reliability, and the maneuverability is unsurpassed, both of which is really important here in New York Harbor” said DeSimone. Photo: Staten Island FerriesCutting Emissions
    Public organizations such like the Staten Island Ferries are under pressure, too, to reduce their carbon footprint. “When people start to talk about 2050 it still seems far off,” said DeSimone. “But if we are sitting here now in 2020 talking about building a new class of vessels, these vessels will likely be operating up to or through 2050.”

    The new Ollis class ferries will be Tier IV. “We had an emissions projects here with the port authority (more than 10 years ago) which essentially funded the emissions upgrades on the Staten Island Ferries,” said DeSimone. At the time, the port was engaged in a dredging project to accommodate larger container ships, and the port authority needed to offset emissions to complete the project. “The Austin class actually was one of the first in the nation with an SCR system,” said DeSimone. “The new Tier IV vessels will have urea injection, too.”

    Publicly owned vessel operators must take particular care when integrating new technologies, as reliability of service is paramount. Case in point, the Staten Island Ferries trialed bio-diesel more than a decade ago, but while bio-diesel comes with environmental promise, there are also problems, as DeSimone explained. “The use of bio-diesel in the marine environment is very limited. In our case, we have medium speed, higher horsepower engines with fuel purifiers onboard. The purifiers tend to take the ‘bio’ out of the fuel, and the purifier filter clean-up became a huge issue. If the filters aren’t kept clean, you bog the engines down and increase maintenance issues.”

    But DeSimone and his technical team keep an open mind, looking for proven technologies that can help it achieve its mission safely, cost-effectively and in step with evolving legislative mandate. While the large, orange double-ended ferries carrying nearly 5,000 people are the vision that most have of the Staten Island Ferry Service, there is another smaller specialty ferry that, upon its replacement, will serve as the testing ground for a new all-electric solution.

    The ferry Cosgrove currently runs between City Island and Hart Island, Bronx, a contract with the coroner’s office to deliver bodies to the ‘Potter’s Field’ there. At the time of this interview, the design for the new ferry was just about complete and ready to go out for bid on a new all-electric plug-in ferry, measuring roughly 60 x 40 ft., to replace Cosgrove.  “We thought that would be a good opportunity to look at electric in step with the IMO initiative to cut emissions,” said DeSimone.  “This one is small enough that the technology – the batteries and motors – are commercially available. For the rest of our fleet, the technology is simply not there yet.”
    When it comes to emission reduction, DeSimone and his team are not remiss to look at new and emerging technology. But caution is heightened as reliability is paramount for this pubic service. “I think it’s important that we have proven technology,” said DeSimone. “We’re not going to experiment with the backbone of our fleet.”


    The Ollis Class Ferries
    Eastern Shipbuilding Group, Inc. (ESG) launched the SSG Michael H. Ollis (Hull 219) in November 2019, the first of three new Staten Island Ollis Class Ferries for the City of New York Department of Transportation (NYCDOT) Staten Island Ferry Division.

    The Ollis Class Ferries are named after fallen soldier of the U.S. Army 10th Mountain Division at Fort Drum, 'Climb to Glory', Army Staff Sgt. Michael H. Ollis, a Staten Island native killed in Afghanistan on August 28, 2013, serving during Operation Enduring Freedom. The first of the series, Hull 219, is named in his honor. Staff Sgt. Michael H. Ollis, of the 2nd Battalion, 22nd Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division (Light), stepped into the path of a Polish officer, blocking him from the suicide vest of an insurgent who had raided Forward Operating Base Ghazni. Ollis has received several honors posthumously including: Distinguished Service Cross, Purple Heart, Bronze Star, Silver Star, The Audie Murphy Medallion, Polish Gold Star Medal of Honor, and the Afghanistan Star from Poland for his valor. He was 24 years old.
    The three Ollis Class double-ended 4,500 passenger ferries, are from a design provided by Elliot Bay Design Group, with each ferry featuring four ABS Electro-Motive Diesel (EMD) 12-710 @ 900 rpm EPA Tier 4  marine propulsion engines with two engines powering one ABS Reintjes DUP 3000 P combining gear and one (1) ABS 36 RV6 ECS/285-2 Voith Schneider Propeller at each end of the vessel. Power generation is provided by three ABS, EPA Tier 3 marine continuous duty diesel generator sets, Caterpillar C18 driving 480 V, 60 Hz, 3-phase generators rated at 425 kW at 0.8 P.F. @ 1800 rpm.

    See Related Story: https://www.marinelink.com/news/eye-maritime-design-better-ferries-ebdg-476825
     

    Ollis Class Ferry Main Particulars

    ESG Hull #/Name

    H219 - SSG MICHAEL H. OLLIS
    H220 - SANDY GROUND
    H221 - TBD
    Length, o.a.                                        320 ft.
    Length on Design Load w.l.             308.4 ft.
    Beam, molded                                   70 ft.
    Beam over guards                            70.3 ft.
    Depth at main deck at side             21.5 ft.
    Design draft                                       13 ft.
    Installed horsepower                       9,980 hp
    Fuel oil capacity (95%, approx.)      30,000 gal.
    Minimum seating capacity              2,551
    Maximum passenger capacity        4,500
    Crew   16
    RegulatoryABS A1, Ferry Service, River Service, AMS Notation. USCG Subchapter H Passenger Vessel



  • has been designed for yearround operation in New York Harbor area, and its primary use will be for off-peak passenger travel between Manhattan and Staten Island. The Alice Austin is an all-welded steel hull and superstructure double- ended ferry utilizing twin Voit Schneider Model VSP-24611/165 propulsor

  • Company-U.S. has opened a new bulk lube facility at its Gulfport Terminal located on the Arthur Kill Waterway one mile south of Goethals Bridge on Staten Island, N.Y. The facility will provide bulk over-the-dock service of lube oil, No. 2 fuel, and potable water to towboats, catugs, and other service

  • was part of a New York City Department of Transportation (NYCDOT) study to retrofit the Molinari Class Ferries, which operate to the world-renowned Staten Island, with Voith Schneider Propulsion (VSP). One of the objectives was to investigate the modification in terms of energy efficiency. The Staten

  • MN 100: Catalina Express, Boston Harbor Cruises, British Columbia Ferries, Washington State Ferries, Staten Island Ferries The most important part of the short sea shipping equation carries the most critical cargo: you. The notion that North America’s short sea shipping program has yet to set sail is

  • and marine engineering firm.We checked in with John Waterhouse, Chief Concept Engineer at EBDG, for insights on some of the design elements on the new Staten Island Ferries.Elliott Bay Design Group (EBDG) served as the design lead on the new “Ollis” class of Staten Island Ferries. “We started

  • , Conn., Industrial Marine Service, Inc. of Norfolk, Va., and Jet Line Services, Inc. of Boston. They will join with Reynolds Shipyard Corporation on Staten Island, N.Y., to provide a considerable reservoir of experienced men, equipment and facilities for the Port of New York. The new company, with a prime

  • Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia. The new ferry will be powered by a Voith Schneider propulsion system, the same type that is used by the Staten Island Ferry which transports passengers between Manhattan and Staten Island. The unique Voith Schneider propulsion system enables a vessel to turn

  • designed and constructed for year-round operation in New York Harbor. Her primary use will be for off-peak passenger travel between Manhattan and Staten Island. The vessel will also be put to use during the forthcoming July 4 weekend Statue of Liberty celebration. The ferry is named for Alice Austen

  • AAT Communications Corporation, headquartered in Staten Island, N.Y., has announced the availability of Wesmar marine products, including scanning sonar, Loran C, and satellite navigation equipment. In addition to the Wesmar line, AAT also supplies and services marine communications and navigation e

  • job that comes into its yards. Comprised of GMD Shipyard in Brooklyn, N.Y., Bayonne Drydock & Repair Corp. in Bayonne, N.J. and JenMar Electric in Staten Island, N.Y., the parent company has all its bases covered in terms of full ship repair sen'ice for its clients, which range from cruise ship owners

  • Board of Commissioners approved a measure to undertake a demonstration project with the New York City Department of Transportation to retrofit a Staten Island ferryboat with new exhaust emission reduction devices. If the project is successful, a new agreement between the two agencies could be developed

  • MT Mar-24#26 FEATURE  OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTRUMENTATION & SENSORS
Kevin)
    March 2024 - Marine Technology Reporter page: 26

    FEATURE OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTRUMENTATION & SENSORS Kevin Mackay, TESMaP voyage leader and Center head of the South and West Paci? c Regional Centre of Seabed 2030. Kevin in the seismic lab at Greta Point looking at the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano 3D map completed with data from the TESMaP voyage

  • MT Mar-24#22 FEATURE  OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTRUMENTATION & SENSORS
Aerial)
    March 2024 - Marine Technology Reporter page: 22

    FEATURE OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTRUMENTATION & SENSORS Aerial view of HT-HH volcano, showing new multibeam depth data overlaid on islands satellite image. © SEA-KIT, NIWA-Nippon Foundation TESMaP 22 March/April 2024 MTR #3 (18-33).indd 22 4/4/2024 9:08:10 AM

  • MN Apr-24#41 Vessels
Gripper
ing European CTV operator Northern Offshore)
    April 2024 - Marine News page: 41

    Vessels Gripper ing European CTV operator Northern Offshore Services (N-O-S) and U.S.-based investment ? rm OIC. The vessel, based on N-O-S’ 30-meter G-class design, fea- tures Volvo Penta’s IPS propulsion system and is said to be “hybrid-ready”, meaning it was built with space reserved for all the

  • MN Apr-24#40 Vessels
General Arnold
Chasse, La. The 32-inch CSD will)
    April 2024 - Marine News page: 40

    Vessels General Arnold Chasse, La. The 32-inch CSD will immediately begin work on Phase Four of the Corpus Christi Ship Channel Improvement Project. The project will bene? cially reuse 100% of the dredged material removed from the channel deepening and widening. The General Arnold is the newest,

  • MN Apr-24#31 McAllister Towing
Grace McAllister, one of three sisters)
    April 2024 - Marine News page: 31

    McAllister Towing Grace McAllister, one of three sisters from Washburn & Doughty. ered WINDEA Courageous, the ? rst of three CTVs for an earlier contract with Windea CTV LLC. Other shipyards known to be build- ing CTVs at the moment include Blount Boats and Sensesco Marine, both in Rhode Island

  • MN Apr-24#30 Feature
Shipbuilding 
Crowley
Crowley’s electric tug 
eWolf)
    April 2024 - Marine News page: 30

    Feature Shipbuilding Crowley Crowley’s electric tug eWolf, built by Master Boat Builders. Administration (MARAD) put a cost of $97 million on the ulatory ? lings, the vessel “is expected to be delivered and vessel. The same yard has also been contracted to build an operational in 2025.” Filings with

  • MN Apr-24#27 Feature
Shipbuilding 
Loumania Stewart / U.S. Coast)
    April 2024 - Marine News page: 27

    Feature Shipbuilding Loumania Stewart / U.S. Coast Guard focus), which require very different business systems to be in place. “We’ve been able to do both,” he said, noting that having systems in place for government jobs makes East- ern Shipbuilding “move-in ready for the Navy and other DOD agencies

  • MN Apr-24#24 Feature
Navigation 
cables, 9 miles of cables connecting)
    April 2024 - Marine News page: 24

    Feature Navigation cables, 9 miles of cables connecting substations and up to blurred, undependable information for vessel crews. two export transmission cables with “associated secondary In the fairways Notice, the USCG references the NAS cable protection” (text is from the permit) within a 42-mile-

  • MN Feb-24#40 Vessels
HOS Warhorse & HOS Wild Horse 
shipyard construction)
    February 2024 - Marine News page: 40

    Vessels HOS Warhorse & HOS Wild Horse shipyard construction contracts were wrongfully termi- nated. Gulf Island and Hornbeck settled in October 2023, clearing way for the builds to be completed by another yard. Eastern secured the contract to complete the builds from Zurich American Insurance Company

  • MN Feb-24#23 Passenger Vessel Safety
occur on a sightseeing vessel or)
    February 2024 - Marine News page: 23

    Passenger Vessel Safety occur on a sightseeing vessel or an Ohio River dinner cruise? This contrast between speci? c – sometimes very speci? c – and general comes to mind when considering the numerous safety advisories pertaining to recent amphibious DUKW boat tragedies or the 2019 Conception dive boat

  • MN Feb-24#8 By the
Numbers
© Dragon Claws / Adobe Stock 
Rebuilding)
    February 2024 - Marine News page: 8

    By the Numbers © Dragon Claws / Adobe Stock Rebuilding the Foundations of US Offshore Wind By Philip Lewis, Director of Research, Intelatus Global Partners As we enter a New Year, the memories of the shocks to with a potential of 3.3-6.3 GW in Delaware and Chesa- the foundations to the U.S. offshore wind

  • MT Jan-24#59 All images courtesy Oceanology International
participants)
    January 2024 - Marine Technology Reporter page: 59

    All images courtesy Oceanology International participants and to deliver another packed three days of exhi- Oi24 Events and Features bition and conference activity, features, workshops and one- Oceanology International is able to capitalize on the advan- to-one meetings.” tages of ExCeL’s expansive 18

  • MT Jan-24#37 an online dashboard will convey ? ndings and share stories.)
    January 2024 - Marine Technology Reporter page: 37

    an online dashboard will convey ? ndings and share stories. GETTING UNDERWAY Sailing to remote parts of the ocean between June and Oc- “A modern-day warrior is not about war. It’s about the per- tober, Ocean Warrior intends to cover 10,000 nautical miles son—honesty, integrity, empathy, intelligence

  • MR Jan-24#41 In the Shipyard
Latest Deliveries, Contracts and Designs
Van)
    January 2024 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 41

    In the Shipyard Latest Deliveries, Contracts and Designs Van Oord Upgrades Heavy-lift Gulf Craft, Incat Crowther an Oord’s heavy-lift installation vessel Team on Virgin Island Ferry VSvanen will receive a major upgrade: the gan- try crane will be extended by 25m, making the vessel ready to handle the

  • MR Dec-23#36 G    REAT
of
HIPS
S
2023
Eastern Shipbuilding
OPC: A “G -C)
    December 2023 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 36

    G REAT of HIPS S 2023 Eastern Shipbuilding OPC: A “G -C ”AME HANGER he much-needed replacement for the Coast The OPC is based on the Vard Marine Inc., VARD 7 110 Guard’s long-serving medium endurance cut- Offshore Patrol Vessel design. Vard has been working with ters (WMECs) took a giant step closer

  • MR Dec-23#33 Image courtesy GLDD
DGE ALVESTON SLAND G  I
Senior Director)
    December 2023 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 33

    Image courtesy GLDD DGE ALVESTON SLAND G I Senior Director Sales - Global Marine and Stationary, Wabtec, off we are. Minimizing weight is an important consideration for makes the system smaller and simpler for the customer the that type of vessel and it links right into the reduced weight of the cost

  • MR Dec-23#32 G    REAT
of
HIPS
S
2023
GLDD H  DOPPER REDG
NE OF THE)
    December 2023 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 32

    G REAT of HIPS S 2023 GLDD H DOPPER REDG NE OF THE BEST FEATURES OF THE ALVESTON IS HER RELATIVE SHALLOW DRAFT FOR HER CAPACITY O THAT ALLOWS HER TO GET CLOSER TO THE BEACH TO BE MORE EFFICIENT AND TO USE LESS ENERGY TO GET THE WORK DONE HE S GOT THE LATEST SUITE OF DREDGE CONTROLS IN AUTOMATION AND

  • MR Dec-23#2 NO.12 / VOL. 85 / DECEMBER 2023
18
Photo on the Cover:)
    December 2023 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 2

    NO.12 / VOL. 85 / DECEMBER 2023 18 Photo on the Cover: Royal Caribbean Group | Photo this page: FMD 18 Robots in the Engineroom Departments Fairbanks Morse Defense is developing robotics in-house to address the US 4 Authors & Contributors Navy’s need for future autonomous vessels. 6 Editorial By Greg

  • MN Nov-23#49 R.B. WEEKS
Eastern Shipbuilding Group
Florida shipbuilder)
    November 2023 - Marine News page: 49

    R.B. WEEKS Eastern Shipbuilding Group Florida shipbuilder Eastern Ship- rier islands and nourishing beaches an electrical power, propulsion, and building Group (ESG) this Spring de- lost to erosion, aiding the U.S. Army dredge machinery package by Royal livered R.B. Weeks, a 8,550 cubic yard Corps of

  • MN Nov-23#48 Feature
Great Vessels of 2023
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock)
    November 2023 - Marine News page: 48

    Feature Great Vessels of 2023 Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Corporation GALVESTON ISLAND Delivered this year amid an ongoing dredge building ed by a USCG requirement for crawl spaces around the boom in the United States, Galveston Island is the ? rst tanks in the event of a leak, Webb noted. “[Urea tanks

  • MN Nov-23#10 By the
Numbers
Jones Act Dredging Commercial Fleet Orderbook)
    November 2023 - Marine News page: 10

    By the Numbers Jones Act Dredging Commercial Fleet Orderbook Over Past Five Years CompanyDredge NameDredge TypeCapacityShipyardStatus Manson ConstructionFrederick PaupHopper15,000 cyKeppel AmFELS (TX)Expected delivery Q4 2023 Cashman DredgingMighty QuinHopper (T&B)4,000 cyFeeny’s Shipyard (NY)In service

  • MR Nov-23#58 PORT FUNDING
The ports authority found success by tailoring)
    November 2023 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 58

    PORT FUNDING The ports authority found success by tailoring its projects to city has already submitted one Port Infrastructure Develop- the requirements of the grants programs. For example, for the ment Program grant and is positioned for other prospects to Colonel's Island Terminal needed to increase

  • MR Nov-23#52 PHILIPPINE)
    November 2023 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 52

    PHILIPPINE'S FASTCAT FERRIES “[Hong Kong mogul] Sir Gordon Wu came to our of? ce, and we also went to his of? ce in Hong Kong; he was interested to get into this business. He told me: ‘Mary Ann, as long as there's water, you have business. The name of the game is ef? ciency.’ So I guess the challenge

  • MR Nov-23#51 PHILIPPINE)
    November 2023 - Maritime Reporter and Engineering News page: 51

    PHILIPPINE'S FASTCAT FERRIES Hitting bottom did not mean quitting, and the decision was made to change its course. “We will give our country what it needs – safe maritime transportation,” said Mary Ann. So in 2010 the company switched gears and decided to take the plunge and invest in new, modern tonnage.