Quantcast
Channel: Shipfax
Viewing all 3402 articles
Browse latest View live

Princess of Acadia - deadlines continue to pass

$
0
0

The elegant old lady of the Bay of Fundy, Princess of Acadia, has apparently been granted a stay of execution. As various parties hastened to Saint John last week to hear an announcement by the Minister of Transport, they were anticipating news of the ship's replacement. Instead they could conclude that she will probably still be in service two years from now (which gives the government time to call another election and re-promise for the umpteenth time that a replacement is just over the horizon.)

Princess of Acadia puts some reverse on her props as she glides into Digby this afternoon in a postcard perfect arrival.

Built in 1971 for CP Ships the 10,108.58 gross ton ferry, at 150m long and with a passenger capacity of 650 is certainly a big ship, but for her sometimes bumpy 92 mile run between Digby, NS and Saint John, NB, she has proven to be the right size, though nowadays never loaded to capacity. Her four GM locomotive type diesels are inefficient by current standards (and polluting too), and the ship is certainly tired despite numerous refits and redecorating.

In 1974 the Minister of Transport took over ownership of the ferry and in 1976 management was transferred from CP to CN Marine (later to become Marine Atlantic). Bay Ferries became managers in 1997.  

The government previously announced  that they wanted to "identify" a replacement by January 3, 2014, select one by May 31, 2014 for delivery July 31, 2014 to undergo modifications by December 31, 2014 and to go into service in March 2015. Minister Rait merely announced $58 mn over two years of funding for three ferry services: Digby-Saint John, Caribou-Wood Island, and Souris-Grindstone, with no new ferry in sight or even hinted at.

The "new" ferry for Digby-Saint John was in fact to have been a used ferry, built not before 1995. How a 20 year old ship could even be contemplated for this service is beyond me. Not only that it was to be 85m long versus the 150m of Princess of Acadia. The 399 passengers (they threw 250 overboard in one stroke of the pen) will be sick as dogs on rough days due to pitching, even if the "new" ship is bristling with stabilizers. Maybe they found that their inadequate spec was not going to be met without huge refit costs and terminal upgrades and have gone back to the drawing board. I hope so. After all British Columbia Ferries and Société des Traversiers de Québec are building new ships overseas. They aren't going to fall into the trap that the feds went for of buying bargain basement trains and submarines abroad. Surely they have learned from those fiascos by now. Let's hope that instead of buying time (and trouble) at a low price they will decide to buy new for quality and the long term. 

Perhaps the new ferry is is just over the horizon, but I suspect it is sailing away from us, and it will be several years before the great old Princess is finally tied up for the last time and the Bay Ferries logo is affixed to a new ship.


.

Brand new for Nordana

$
0
0


Nordana (NORwegian DANish) Lines brought a brand new ship into Halifax today - the first in a series of new ships to replace iconic oldies that broke new ground when they were built.
Back in 1979 when Skodsborg and her sisters  Skanderborg, Shackenborg and Stjerneborg were built, they among the very first combi-carriers: RoRo, container and heavy lift. They proved so incredibly versatile on the North America and Caribbean service of Nordana Lines, that they were thought to be worth lengthening in 2002 - very late in life - and reconditioned. In fact on completion the ship was reclassified as if new in 1984. Another rebuild in 2004 brought the ship up to as if new in 1990 status.

In 1986 Skodsborg had not yet been rebuilt, and only carried one heavy lift derrick.



Built as Dana Africa by Nippon Kokan KK in Shimizu, Japan, the ship only started calling in Halifax after renaming in 1984. Owners Dannebrog Rederi AS had formed Nordana Lines, with Norwegian shipowners Fearnley+Eger, trading to the Med and Caribbean. Fearnley's backed out when they quit shipowning, but the line kept its name. As trade expanded to include the North American east coast, they became rare callers in Halifax, preferring Saint John, NB.
Measuring 12,076 grt as built, 14,805 as rebuilt, the ship was fitted with one 36 tonne crane and two 120 tonne derricks, and could carry 654 TEUs (as rebuilt) and substantial RoRo cargo.In 2012 it was sold to Italian owners, but chartered back by Nordana.


Now after all these years Nordana is upgrading its fleet with new generation ships. The first of the projected new ships, Wedellsborg, arrived today at pier 41. It measures 23,030 grt and was delivered in June by Cantiere Navale Visentini in Port Viro (near Venice) Italy. It carries two 40 tonne cranes -seemingly having forsaken the ultra-competitive heavy-lift market in favour of containers, RoRo and oversize/project type cargoes, including yachts. 

 Wedellsborg sails for Algeria after calls in Mexico and the US east coast.

.

Sails on the Waterfront

$
0
0
Two sailing ships tied up at the Tall Ship Quay today. An off year for the Tall Ships events, it is a pleasure to see a few of these ships come into Halifax independently.


Yesterday's arrival was Lord Nelson - predictably a British  sail training ship. However not just any sail training vessel. It belongs to the Jubilee Sailing Trust, a non -profit that provides sail experience for persons of all abilities including those confined to wheelchairs, with limited vision or hearing.



Purpose built in 1986, the vessel was restored in 2008-2009. The three masted barque is completing a two year round the world voyage, and will be conducting trips from Halifax for the next few weeks.

Today saw Sedna IV a Canadian ship with a long history and some interesting achievements.

It was purpose built too, but for an entirely different purpose, hinted at by her stern. Built in 1957 in Germany as a trawler, it was not until 1991 that it became a sailing vessel. Since coming to Canada in 2001 it has been a floating film editing studio and research vessel. In 2002 it completed an east to west Northwest Passage and started a round-the-world trip in 2011. In 2012 it was in Halifax to start the Asia and Africa leg, and in 2013 was in Amazonia, the Mediterranean and the Arctic.

.

Algoma Hansa - rare Canadian visit - NO MORE

$
0
0
(JULY 31 - SEE UPDATE BELOW)
Although Canadian owned, the tanker Algoma Hansa rarely visits Canadian waters. It loomed in out of the fog today and tied up at pier 34, the normal roost of fleetmate Algoma Dartmouth (which shoved along to pier 33 to make room).
Soon several no-name tank trucks arrived alongside, and appeared to be pumping out slops when I caught up with it late this afternoon.


Built in 1998 by Alabama Shipyard in Mobile as Amelienborg it operated for Dannebrog Rederi of Denmark until 2006 when Algoma purchased it and sister Aggersborg. The latter ship was refitted in Halifax and modified for St.Lawrence Seaway service.It was registered in Canada as Algosea and operates for Algoma's domestic tanker fleet.
Amelienborg went into operation for Algoma Tankers International Inc, as the first ship in a new operation,  Hanseatic Pool, jointly formed by Algoma and several European operators. Following difficulties with Chinese shipbuilders*, that pool was wound up and Algoma Hansa, as it became in 2008, joined the Navi8 pool. It now operates within the Navig8 Brizo8 sub-pool. Management is entrusted to Bernard Schulte Ship Management out of Limassol, Cyprus (one of the other  original partners in the Hanseatic pool), and it flies the Bahamas flag. Tonnages are 11,290 grt, 16,775 dwt with phenolic coated tanks.
In 2013, during a regular drydocking, the ship was modified for Seaway service. The work included trimming back its bridge wings and in July 2013 it made its first trip into the Great Lakes.
As Algoma's only non-Canadian tanker (it has several non-Canadian flag deep sea bulk carriers) there has always been speculation about if and when the ship would be "patriated" to Canada. Because it was built in the US it is also presumably Jones Act eligible if it operated for US owners.
There is no sign of it changing flag at this point.

For some background on that situation see:
http://shipfax.blogspot.ca/2012/12/sloman-hera-algoma-says-not-better-late.html
http://shipfax.blogspot.ca/2013/05/algoma-tankers-internaitonal-update.html


Update: The ship was registered in Halifax July 31, so is now Canadian. We would expect to see a lot more it now!
.

Bahri Jeddah - still looks new

$
0
0
The Saudi ConRo Bahri Jeddah visited Halifax again on Friday. Delivered in January, she made her first call here in April: http://shipfax.blogspot.ca/2014/04/bahri-jeddah.html but she still looks brand new.


As usual her upper deck carries cars out in the open, while her lower RoRo decks carry vehicles and other cargo in sheltered conditions. The ship carries containers forward and has cranes if needed. While in Halifax a shore crane is used to handle the boxes.

.

Rare success for CCG surplus

$
0
0
The Canadian government's abysmal record in selling off its older ships (which I have ranted about before) rarely results in any useful occupation for the vessels. Left to moulder, often for several years, before they are listed for sale, they are then subjected to several "re-offerings" at lower and lower reserved prices until someone finally bites.

CGS Louisbourg soon after delivery to the Department of Fisheries in 1977, tied up at Queen's Wharf in Halifax.

CCGS Louisborg is such an example, now being offered for the fifth time by my account. Built in 1977 it was removed from service in October 2012. Sometime in 2013 it was turned over for sale. (This is fairly rapid by usual standards). In December 2013 it was first listed for sale with a minimum price of $385,000. By this time everyone knows that the government will eventually settle for far less, so it was that the minimum bid was reduced at successive sales to $300,000, $285,000, $250,000 and now with no minimum (closing August 11.) How low can you go?

By the time the ships are sold they are usually good for scrap only, but there is some hope for Louisbourg, which has an aluminum hull.

A rare success story is the former CCGS Sir Humphrey Gilbert. A fine icebreaker, built by Davie Shipbuilding in Lauzon in 1959, it received a major refit in 1984-85 when it had a new bow built at Halifax Shipyard. Removed from service in 2001 the ship was renamed 2001-06 for sale. It was briefly renamed Gilbert I for new owners, but in July 2002 it became Polar Prince and became Canada's only commercial icebreaker for hire. (There are other ships classed as Icebreakers, but they are cargo carriers)
Although it has had a succession of owners since, it is still in service. It has spent this past winter in Lunenburg, but now appears to be readying for some sort of mission.

Polar Prince at the railway pier in Lunenburg this morning. Note the crewman atop the helicopter hangar.

Here are some informative links:
http://www.polarprince.com/
http://www.polarprince.com/icebreakers.php
http://www.atlantic-marine.co.uk/pdf/PolarPrince.pdf
http://shipfax.blogspot.ca/2010/06/polar-prince-calls-again-under-new-name.html


.

Sunday round up

$
0
0
Sunday callers at Autoport are not unheard of, but they are fairly rare. Today's arrival was Crystal Ace  It was a hazy day so the ship's starboard side, was free of the deep shadow which would normally be the case.


While alongside at Autoport, ships send their head lines out to a pair of mooring buoys. The tug Roseway tends these lines, making its way from Dartmouth Cove to Autoport to meet the ship on arrival and back again to let it go.




Once the lines are free, tugs (not visible behind the ship) ease the ship off the berth and it exits Eastern Passage for the main harbour and off to sea.

Crystal Ace dates from 2012 when it emerged from the Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Kobe shipyard. It is operated by Mitsui OSK Lines under the Marshal Islands flag and measures 60,131 grt.

Later in the evening the tanker Silver Express came to anchor for inspection. It was met by the tug Atlantic Oak which stood by, and the launch Halmar which took inspectors out to the ship. The ship's last port was Freetown, Sierra Leone, so let's hope they inspected for Ebola.

Built by Onomichi Dockyard, it is a 26,900 grt, 47,701 dwt product tanker operated by Doun Kisen of Japan, under the Panama flag.

It was a quiet day at HMC Dockyard, as the Standing NATO Maritime Group 2 flotilla rests in port for the weekend. All crammed together at Jetty November Bravo, the ships form a solid looking mass.


From the left TCG Kemalreis F-247 Anzac class (Turkish), USS Anzio CG-66 (tan mast) and Leyte Gulf  CG-55, Ticonderoga class, on the south side of the pier. On the north side the massive USNS Medgar Evers T-AKE 13 Lewis and Clarke class, dwarfing FGS Niedersachsen F-208  Bremen class.

HMCS Regina was a member of the group but peeled off and headed for the Panama Canal on her way home to Esquimalt.

The ships are due to sail Tuesday morning for exercises, starting at 0900 on half hour intervals. Medgar Evers will move to Imperial Oil at 1100 and spend the day taking on fuel.

.

Panamax for Fairveiw

$
0
0
Although it was a civic holiday in Halifax today, Fairview Cove worked two ships, the familiar Seoul Express, and another first timer NYK Diana in bound from the orient via west and east coast ports.



Built in 2008 by Hyundai, Ulsan, the 55,534 grt ship has a container capacity of 4922 TEU
The trickle down of Panamax sized ships continues with owners diverting these less efficient ships to make room for post-Panamax giants on the long hauls.

 The ship sails late this evening for Southampton.

.

Tuesday Roundup

$
0
0
Another busy day in Halifax. Among the highlights:

 The Dutch flag cargo ship Floragracht arrived and anchored in the lower harbour for inspeciton. Built in 2011 by Jiangsu Changbo Shipyard in Jingjiang, China, it measures 8,620 grt, 12,178 dwt and carries three 80 tonne cranes. Owner Spliethoff's operate six sister ships in the "F" class.

Atlantic Towing Ltd's Atlantic Condor set out out on her regular run to Deep Panuke. Built by Halifax Shipyard in 2010, the supplier makes the trip at least once a week.
 
HMCS Athabaskan, followed by HMCS Halifax were the first naval ships to sail this morning, followed by the NATO visiting ships.With HMCS Iroquois laid up with corrosion problems, Athabaskan is as close to a destroyer as the RCN has on this coast.


Turkish Kemalries gets under way for sea. Her canted funnels are reminiscent of the Canadian Tribalsas built.

USNS Medgar Evers makes its way slowly from HMC Dockyard to Imperial Oil. A Sea King helo buzzes around the ship.


The tanker Cape Beale moved out to anchor to create space for Medgar Evers. Cape Beale was built in 2005 by Hyundai Mipo in Ulsan, 25,108 grt, 40,327 dwt. It operates for Columbia Ship Management Deutschland of Hamburg in the UPT pool.


.

Summer Break

$
0
0

 Shipfaxhas passed the 1500 mark in posts, so it is time for a break. I will take my usual August holiday from postings, due to traveling, and will be back on line early in September.

Re-paving in the Basin

$
0
0
In a semi-repeat of the July 12 operation there was another transfer of asphalt cargo in Bedford Basin today.
[See http://shipfax.blogspot.ca/2014/07/bunkering-in-basin.html for the July operation].

The smaller of the two tankers, Asphalt Sailor was also here for the July operation and received cargo from a larger tanker. In July it was Asphalt Eagle, but this time it was Asphalt Star. A similar ship of 28,559 grt, 46,432 dwt, it was also built by Onomichi Dockyard, but in 1996. It carried the name Asia Pioneer to  1997, then Seajoy to 2001, before signing on with current operators Chronos Shipping of Greece.

Both ships arrived at anchor about midnight last night, with Asphalt Star anchoring and Asphalt Sailor berthing alongside. A pair of large rubber fenders of the Yokohama type, were positioned between the two ships.


Late this afternoon when the transfer operation was completed, the tug Atlantic Willow came in to assist Asphalt Sailor to get away.


Asphalt Sailor was first through the Narrows, It was then the turn of Roseway to marshal the two fenders and take them back to Dominion Diving Ltd.
 

A mountain of gypsum ore looms above the treeline on the Dartmouth shore as Roseway makes for the Narrows.

 

Finally after weighing anchor, Asphalt Star sailed into the Narrows and out to sea.  Both tankers are specially fitted to carry asphalt, and to keep it heated and liquid during transit.

.

Saturday Roundup

$
0
0
There was quite a bit of activity in the harbour for a change on a Saturday - here is a roundup:

More tankers arriving and departing, which now seems to be a pretty typical Halifax activity after Imperial Oil ceased refining about a year ago. According to newspaper reports Imperial has started to the dismantling process, which may take several years. The first step was to remove residue from pipes and systems, and this may not be completed yet.  Presumably some of that material will be sent away on tankers for processing by other refineries.
Meanwhile new product continues to come in from the US. Most comes from Houston, but the New York and New Orleans areas are also sources. Imperial will maintain its tank storage and distribution capacity after the refinery portion is dismantled.

An early morning arrival was Seto Express, which anchored in the lower harbour until late morning.

In many ways a typical handysize tanker of 28,799 grt, 47,999 dwt,  it was however built by Iwagi Shipbuilding in the never-heard-of port of Kamijima, Japan. Shoei Kisen ownes the ship, but it is managed by Thome Shipmanagement of Singapore under the Panama flag.
It did not remain at anchor long, moving to Imperial Oil late morning on departure of Neveska Lady (see Halifax Shipping News) for a photo of her.)

Another product tanker arrived mid-morning.



Arionas is a really typical handy-size, built by Hyundai Mipo, Ulsan in 2006 at 23,270 grt, 37,627 dwt. It flies the Marshal Islands flag for Capital Ship Management of Athens. It headed to Bedford Basin to anchor where it joined another typical handy-sizer.


Energy Pride arrived September 3 and has been idle since. Also Korean-built, it came from STX Shipbuilding of Pusan in 2004. At 30,095 grt and 51,319 dwt it is slightly over the 50,000 dwt figure usually quoted as the upward size limit for handys.

There was also container ship activity today, with APL Agate at Ceres and Maersk Pembroke and Zim Luanda at Halterm. Also calling at Ceres (Fairview Cove) was a fill-in for Atlantic Container Line. On its eastbound leg, Em Itaki  was in port last week westbound.  An odd choice for ACL, since it has no RoRo capability, it may be a one trip spot charter only. I noted that Atlantic Cartier came out of drydock in Le Havre August 24 (and is due here tomorrow) so it may only be covering for that one ship.


Built in 1999 by Minaminippon Shipbuilding in Usuki, Japan, the 2135 TEU ship carries two 40 tonne cranes. Some of those boxes were stacked five high amidships, severely limiting the view forward from the bridge. Despite the large load, the ship does not appear to be deeply laden. Perhaps it was chosen to get a backlog of empties back to Europe. The 25,497 grt, 28,917 dwt ship was built as Santos Challenger, becoming MOL Volta in 2001. It assuemd its present name in 2012 and is also recently out of drydock.

Perhaps because of that limited visibility, it took the tug Atlantic Larch as a closely tethered escort through the Narrows.Usually escort tugs have some scope on their line, but Larch was nosed right up.

The "E" on the ship's funnel stands for Eurobulk, its Athens-based owners. However the ship is registered in Monrovia, Liberia.

.

HMCS St.John's from the graving dock

$
0
0
Tugs moved HMCS St.John's from the graving dock to the Machine Shop wharf at Halifax Shipyard this morning.


Her upper works still shrouded with scaffolding, the grey ship emerged from the first phase of her FELEX upgrade program on a grey day. The first part of the upgrade is done in the graving dock, the second stage alongside the shipyard and the third in HMC Dockyard itself. The process is about 19 months in duraton.
HMCS St.John's is the fifth east coast ship into the FELEX program  - Halifax, Fredericton, Montreal, and Charlottetown preceded. If  the schedule I have is correct, HMCS Ville de Québec will be next followed by Toronto.

.

Trailblazer gone to the beach

$
0
0
The recent parade of gypsum carriers to the scrap yard isn't over yet. With CSL International and its pool of ships upgrading with new or newer ships, the old familiar faces are fast disappearing. In recent months Ambassador and  Pioneer and others have been sent to the scrappers.

 Gold Bond Trailblazer

The latest to go the beaches of Alang, India, is CSL Trailblazer, familiar to older Halifax shipwatchers as Gold Bond Trailblazer, however its story is intertwined in an interesting way with the better known Colon Brown.

Built in 1974 by Sasebo Heavy Industries in Japan, Colon Brown was the second generation of the revolutionary deep-sea self-unloaders pioneered by Ove Skaarup, starting with Melvin H.Baker in 1956. Built as gypsum carriers, they were chartered to National Gypsum, and were frequent callers to Halifax in the boom years for gypsum. Colon Brown was less than a year old when it sailed from Halifax in April 1975, fully loaded, and heading into extreme weather. Just off Halifax, the decision was made to come about and return to port. In doing so however, the ship was severely damaged and began to take water.

It was a near thing, but the ship made it inside Meagher's Beach and was purposely run ashore in Macnab's Cove to prevent it from sinking entirely. With decks nearly awash, and the hull severely twisted, the ship was saved along with all aboard her.

 Colon Brown in the floating drydock Lionel A. Forsyth at Halifax Shipyard for temporary repairs following the intentional grounding grounding. The ship's bow and stern extend beyond the ends of the dock.

Remarkably the ship was patched up enough to return to Japan to be rebuilt. When it got there, a new mid-body was installed and the ship sailed again in 1976 as Gold Bond Conveyor. With the original bow and stern, the ship returned to service carrying gypsum out of Halifax.

 Gold Bond Conveyor ex Colon Brown

On March 13, 1993 it sailed fully loaded from Halifax and headed into the "storm of the century" and was soon in trouble again. Heavy seas collapsed hatches forward and it began to take water. Although aircraft and ships were dispatched to assist, the weather prevented them from aiding the beleaguered vessel and the erstwhile rescuers watched helplessly as it disappeared from radar March 15, 180 miles south of Cape Sable Island, with its entire crew of 33.

The mid-section of the former Colon Brown, although damaged in 1975, was rebuilt and  used in the construction of another ship, named Gold Bond Trailblazer which was completed in 1978. Some design changes were made in the new ship however, and its superstructure was built with one less deck. Later ships, such as Georgia S . (also now gone to scrap) were built with a higher bow to shelter the number one hatch. 

All the Skaarup ships had a totally enclosed self-unloading system, discharging through the stern by means of extendible conveyors from side doors.

The large projection on the stern housed the transverse unloading conveyors, which were concealed behind doors while at sea, but extended outboard for unloading in port. Could uplift from following seas, or damaged doors have been a factor in the the loss of Gold Bond Conveyor?

When CSL took over the National Gypsum contract from Skaarup Shipping, they bought Gold Bond Trailblazer which had become surplus, and renamed it CSL Trailblazer in 1998. Although I don't believe it appeared in Halifax under that name, it  worked for CSL on the west coast carrying aggregates and in the Caribbean/Gulf region with sand and phosphate rock.

Now the Trailblazer is history, and with it, part of the Colon Brown, which survived its ill-fated "parent" by 21 years.

.

Small tugs for Big Ships

$
0
0
Two small tugs went to work this morning to serve two big ships. The cruise ships Maasdam and Norwegian Gem did not need tugs to berth at pier 21 and pier 22 respectively, but they did require servicing once they did tie up.
First alongside Maasdam was Dominion Diving's Big Steel, working as a dive tender:

Built in 1955 for the RCN as YMU 116 and later renamed YMU 116. It has a compressor and hose rack on deck to support diving. The boat has also worked as a pilot boat, line boat and tug.

Meanwhile working its way across the harbour, Gulf Spray with the barge D/B Gavin David and the assist boat Harbour Runner:


Gulf Spray was built in 1959 and extensively rebuilt in 2007. Last March its house and bulwarks were seriously damaged in a storm, but the boat has been repaired and is back in full service. (See Tugfax of March 28 and March 31 for details on the damage.)

.

Cabotage Rant

$
0
0
It is time for another rant on the subject of cabotage. If you've been ignoring me on this topic, here is the gist of it. Cabotage is essentially trade between ports within the same country- also called coasting. Most nations have regulations on cabotage, often restricting such trade to ships belonging to that country.

Perhaps the most extreme form of cabotage law exists in the United States and forms part of the Jones Act. To trade between US ports, a ship must not only fly the flag of the US, it must be owned and built in the US and must have a US crew. There is much more in the Jones Act than that, which was originally enacted to protect US shipbuilding and ensure a sufficient number of ships and crews to respond to national emergency, in case of war, etc.,  Exceptions have been made, but generally it takes an Act of Congress.

Canada's cabotage law is fairly simple- to trade between Canadian ports, the ship must fly the Canadian flag.
Exceptions are made by the Minister of Public Security when no "suitable" Canadian ship is available. The result is that specialized ships such as those used in offshore petroleum work are routinely given coasting licenses since there are no Canadian ships that can do the work.  It does beg the question of whether suitable Canadian ships would be found if Canadian waters were closed to foreign ships. Would Canadian owners have the courage to get into the business and be competitive world wide?

Sophisticated applicants can tailor the type of work to ensure that even if a Canadian ship were available to do some of the work, no Canadian ship could do all of the work. A recent case in point was the coasting license given to the Russian ship Akademik Sergey Vavilov for a combined pleasure cruise and research voyage in the high Arctic. The Canadian icebreaker Polar Prince (ex Sir Humphrey Gilbert) could have done some or most of the work but. not the luxury cruise part, so the Russian got the coasting license.

Akademik Ioffe, sister of Akademik Sergey Vavilov in Halifax in 2011.

Tanker companies have also skilfully played the coasting license game by keeping the number of Canadian flag tankers to the economic minimum possible level, and calling in a foreign ship when all the Canadian ones are busy. This scheme ensures that no Canadian tankers are ever idle for want of work, and that is good for the bottom line. Since Canadian flagged ships are not competitive in international trade, they are kept at work within Canadian waters, and that is also good for the bottom line. However there is another line, and that is the fine line where the market could support another Canadian tanker. Algoma Tankers recently decided that the line had been crossed and brought the tanker Algoma Hansa under Canadian flag permanently. Built in the US, it had been trading internationally under foreign flag and could have been issued a temporary coasting license for short term work-even up to a year, but there was apparently enough longer term work that it was worth bringing the ship into Canadian registry permanently.

Not so clear is the case of  Espada Desgagnés. Earlier this year Transport Desgagnés' tanker subsidiary Pétro-Nav formed a new company with Valero (Ultramar) to transport Alberta tar sands bitumen from Montreal to Lévis, QC, starting in the fall of 2014 when the existing pipeline to Montreal is converted from gas to crude oil. They acquired two very nice foreign tankers and renamed them Espada Desgagnés and Laurentia Desgagnés. Since the ships were not needed until autumn, they were immediately flagged out to Barbados on a charter through an associated offshore entity. (Many Desgagnés dry cargo ships are flagged out foreign for up to half of the year when they are not needed in Canadian coasting work.)  

The handsome Espada Desgagnés heads north...


However, Espada Desgagnés, was granted two coasting licenses this summer to work as a depot ship in the high north, since no Canadian ship was available. Its work was to take fuel from Valero in Lévis to Diana Bay. At anchor there it would dole out the fuel to smaller tankers for delivery to northern ports. This would save the smaller tankers from having to return all the way to Lévis for each load. Having such a large ice class tanker available, which no other company had, ensured that a coasting license was readily available. However Pétro-Nav is a Canadian company, with (presumably) a fully qualified Canadian ship, but is allowed to have it working in Canada under foreign flag, primarily because it has figured out how (and perfectly legally I guess.)

 ... proudly flying the flag of Barbados.

So Canada's cabotage laws may not be perfect and they may be dodged by skilful operators and they may perpetuate high operating costs. That's not to say that they couldn't be improved, or that Canadian ship owners couldn't become much more competitive worldwide if given sufficient regulatory encouragement at home. 

Now we are faced with a new development. Our federal government, which has any uncanny nack for enacting policies that no one has asked for (need I mention the elimination of the long form census among the hundreds of others?) has suddenly decided that Free Trade with the EU is essential to our future. This is largely a matter of spite for the US not granting us a route for another oil sands bitumen pipeline. Also famous for throwing out the baby with the bath water, the negotiators have apparently decided that cabotage is a bad word (if they understood it) and that it can be sacrificed to make the politically important deal.
Ships of any nation - no matter how disreputable are able to trade freely between and within EU countries - so that should be good enough for Canada.

If this comes to pass what could it mean?

1. Overnight, Canadian shipowners will flag out their ships to flags of convenience if they want to remain in business.
2. Owners will fire hundreds of Canadian seafarers, with the loss of well paying jobs (and a source of Canadian income tax) and hire third world crews at a fraction of the cost.
3. The Canadian shipowners will also re-incorporate offshore and will not have to pay a cent of Canadian corporate tax.
4. New foreign operators will appear on the scene with sketchy ships and sketchier lines of responsibility.
5. Canadian ports will begin to host substandard ships that have been detained for deficiencies to safety standards or even abandoned - including their third world crews. Expect more accidents and groundings too - see recent European history where undermanned and substandard ships figure in most shipping incidents.
6. Canadian shipbuilding, which was sacrificed at the altar of defense procurement, is largely dead anyway, but this will ensure that resurrection is never possible, short of a miracle.
7. The cost of transporting goods between Canadian ports may go down, but not much, since incoming foreign operators will only have to compete with each other. Can you imagine the reaction from the Longshoremen when the first foreign flag coaster arrives?

Is this what anyone wants?

Why not instead bring Canadian shipping into a more competitive position world wide?
It is impossible to level the playing field, but why must we try? Just because the EU allows it why must we? It is too much to give up sovereignty of our own waters.Our government is obviously just buying its way into the EU, not negotiating as equals and playing hardball.
To make Canada more competitive would require some clever thinking about a Canadian offshore registry (we are close to having it with Barbados now), and some creative work with seafarers and immigrant workers.
Some other Canadian sacred cows such as dairy marketing boards (pun intended) and inter-provincial barriers would be far better things to give up, than gutting Canadian cabotage laws.    

Watch this story because it is flying well under the radar of most Canadians and most politicians who are geographically challenged by distance from navigable waters.

.

Balmoral over-nighter

$
0
0
Few cruise ships stay in Halifax over night. The exception this year is Balmoral the veteran Fred Olsen ship. Built in 1988 as Crown Odyssey, it has been Norwegian Crown (1996-2000) and Crown Odyssey again (2000-2003) and back to Norwegian Crown (2003-2008).

The overnight stop allows for crew time off and interesting passenger experiences. In 2012 the ship was doing a Titanic  commemoration cruise when in arrived April 16.

As a footnote to yesterday's post: If cabotage laws are removed in Canada, then cruise ships will be able to board and disembark its passengers in Canadian ports, without having to go into international waters or foreign ports between. A Montreal-Halifax cruise (a virtual impossibility until now, except on small specialist ships) might actually be offered by some lines.

.

Seismic done - for this year

$
0
0
According to press reports, BP has completed it seismic exploration work for this year Starting in April, BP has been working almost without cease, south of Sable Island. To maximize sea days for the seismic ships, supply and picket boats worked out of Halifax to support the work.
The standby/supplier/support vessel Mainport Pine has been tied up in Halifax for several days now, since its extended coasting license expired September 15. Its work is now done and will wait for the next assignment.



Geco Diamond arrived this morning and tied up at pier 27, to demobilize. The rest of the fleet are dispersing to the four corners of the earth, and some will return next year for more.

.

Tanker time - again

$
0
0
After  a few days of little tanker activity, we again have three tankers in port.  Two arrived today, but the third has been here almost all month.

Energy Pride picks up some golden energy from the setting sun. It has been anchored in the Bedford Basin since September 3.See Shipfax from September 5 for more details..

Also in the Basin:

Challenge Paradise will be the next up to go the Imperial Oil in the morning. It appears to be in ballast, so it may here to load - not sure what. A member of the huge NYK fleet, it was built in 2007 and measures 28,603 grt, 45,980 dwt. It flies the flag of Panama, and has arrived from the St.Lawrence River.

Meanwhile in the lower harbour:

Apollon, predictably a Greek owned ship, part of the Tsakos Coumbia fleet of Athens, it is registered in the Bahamas. It was built in 2005, measures 30,053 grt, 53,148 dwt. Despite being anchored in the lower harbour, usually the place for short term visits, it has no orders to move yet.

Canadian tanker Algonova arrived September 13, bunkered, then moved to Imperial Oil to unload. It moved out to anchor September 15, then to Valero (Ultramar) in Eastern Passage where it loaded cargo, moving it to Imperial Oil early this morning.


It has been an eventful year for the Turkish-built tanker. Emerging from the now defunct Novadock floating drydock at Halifax Shipyard a year ago, the ship was soon reassigned when Imperial Oil stopped refining operations in Halifax. The ship continued to serve Imperial customers, but from the St.Lawrence, with only occasional calls in Halifax. Then on January 19, 2014 it suffered a serious engine room fire in the Gulf and came to Halifax eventually and under went repairs until April. Since then I believe the ship has been running uneventfully.
.

Augusta Kontor - back again

$
0
0
The name Augusta Kontor is a new one to Halifax, but the ship bearing it has been here before. In today at Fairview Cove for Hapag-Lloyd, the Marshal Island flagged ship is one of a number of spot charters that H-L has been using for the past several months. Coming off a previous charter in January this year the ship had been operating as Charlotte C. Rickmers since 2009, and was renamed Charlotte briefly before taking on its present name.


Built for Rickmers Reederei  GmbH + Cie KG of Hamburg, by Hanjin Heavy Industries of Busan, South Korea, it is one of a large series of similar panamax ships (six for Rickmers) of 54,214 grt and 5060 TEU (454 refrigerated). They were all for charter, and this particular ship served from new in 2004 to 2009 as Maersk Douala. It was under this name that it arrived in Halifax April 30, 2004. It was the first of thirteen calls by Maersk ships that year during the crab season. Maersk was not a regular caller in those days but the lucrative shellfish were enough inducement to add Halifax to its port rotation for a several months. 
I was out of town for that visit, but  Ship-Picswas on scene: http://ship-pics.co.uk/npAUG08.htm
The ship was in full Maersk livery, and was still quite new and looking quite splendid. Its current paint job is not nearly so attractive, and far from spotless.

.
Viewing all 3402 articles
Browse latest View live