Florida’s Port Everglades, one of the largest cruise terminals in the world, is undergoing a transformative set of infrastructure improvements. Costing $1.6bn, the projects include the biggest berth expansion in its history, as well as deeper and wider channels and a new logistics centre. Covid-19 is yet to hinder progress.

Expansion on track: Port Everglades’ new infrastructure projects
Port Everglades is the third-largest cruise terminal in the world. Credit: Broward County’s Port Everglades.

In normal times, the Port Everglades webcam constitutes a veritable, high-definition stream of activity. At any one time, viewers can be guaranteed a glimpse of huge cruise ships and tankers occupying berths and drifting down its navigation channels.

As the world’s third-largest cruise terminal, it is estimated that around 4,000 ships call at the port each year, generating more than $32bn in economic activity and providing 219,000 jobs in and around Fort Lauderdale and South Florida.

But thanks to Covid-19, shipping activity at Port Everglades has been markedly quieter this year. With the cruise industry having ground to a halt, regular visitors such as Royal Caribbean International and Carnival Cruise Line have not dropped anchor in months.

Cargo activity – usually around 25 million tonnes a year – has also tailed off, impacting negatively on its bottom line, meaning the port is unlikely to come close to the operating revenues of $170.7m it achieved in 2019.

Such setbacks, though, have not deterred the government of Broward County – Port Everglades’ owner – from pushing ahead with a new $1.6bn infrastructure improvement programme. As port deputy director Glenn Wiltshire announced in May: “Port Everglades has budgeted for several sizeable construction projects that are moving forward at a rapid pace with little disruption from the virus.”

So, what are these expansion projects set to be implemented over the next five years?

Containerised cargo and widened channels

Front and centre of all of this is a $471m berth expansion – the largest infrastructure project in the port’s 92-year history. This will see new cargo berths added by extending the port’s existing turn-around area from 900ft to 2,400ft, as well as the installation of crane rail infrastructure for three new super post-Panamax cranes, able to accommodate up to 22 container units in width.

Source: ship-technology


The maritime industry’s first movers stand steadfast to take the steps needed to develop, test and scale the technologies required to decarbonize international shipping according to the Getting to Zero Coalition, an industry-led forum.

 

The maritime industry’s first movers stand steadfast to take the steps needed to develop, test and scale the technologies required to decarbonize international shipping according to the Getting to Zero Coalition, an industry-led forum. While they believe that momentum is building around shipping’s decarbonization efforts, research presented during the group’s recent working session highlighted that the International Maritime Organization goal of reducing international shipping’s emissions by at least 40 percent by 2030, will not be enough to prevent shipping’s adverse impact on the climate.

Announced at the UN Climate Action Summit in New York in September 2019, the Getting to Zero Coalition now counts more than 150 member organizations. The members recently met to discuss their initiatives and review the shipping industry’s goals and process towards reducing emissions.

“Members of the Getting to Zero Coalition are fully committed to fast-tracking shipping’s decarbonization. I am impressed by the desire to collaborate, share learnings, and take concrete action,” says Johannah Christensen, Managing Director, Head of Projects & Programmes, Global Maritime Forum. “While members are working together to develop new technologies and business models, they call for ambitious, global regulation to set the industry on a climate-friendly course, but they are prepared to move ahead of the IMO and other regulators to ensure that scalable solutions are in place when regulation is adopted.”

To meet the ambition of having commercially viable zero-emission vessels operating along ocean trade routes by 2030, discussions at the recent working session reveal several key issues that the members felt would be critical to achieving the goals. Among the elements they discussed was the need to develop policies, demand drivers, and funding mechanisms to motivate and de-risk first-mover investments. They also believed it will be important to adopt policy instruments and market-based measures to close the competitiveness gap between conventional and zero emission fuels and associated infrastructure.

”The decarbonization of shipping and its energy value chains represents a large-scale systemic challenge and opportunity. This working session has proven that it will require close collaboration and collective action between the maritime, energy, infrastructure, and finance sectors, with support from government and international organizations. Members of the Getting to Zero Coalition represent the breadth and width that is required, and we invite others who share our bold ambition to join them,” says Kristian Teleki, Director, Friends of Ocean Action.

The members also highlighted the need to explore and narrow down technologies, fuel options, and transition pathways to focus the industry’s drive to achieve the decarbonization goals. They believe that there is a need to identify and grasp the global opportunities for green energy projects that can propel maritime shipping’s decarbonization.

“Policymakers are uniquely positioned to accelerate the decarbonization of shipping and other hard-to-abate sectors when deciding on policies and stimulus measures to kickstart the global economy post-COVID-19. Governments can and must play an important role in building back better by incentivizing the large-scale demonstration projects that are required to drive down costs and accelerate the development of zero-carbon technologies,” says Christoph Wolff, Head of Shaping the Future of Mobility, World Economic Forum.

At the working session’s closing plenary, Nigel Topping, High-Level Climate Action Champion for COP26 said: “The shipping ecosystem could well get to COP26 in Glasgow as an example of how to create a zero emission future and work together around decarbonization. I look forward to seeing how other industries can learn from you and join the race to zero. We have a challenging but inspiring year ahead of us.”

Source: pmo


The shipping industry is faced with one of the greatest humanitarian crises in years, affecting over half a million people.

Six months into the pandemic 300,000 seafarers are stuck at sea, some of them for 17 months, 6 months longer than allowed under the Maritime Labour Convention (MLC). Around 300,000 more seafarers are pending to sign onto ships, and start earning their salaries.

Fatigue,  physical and mental strain seafarers are faced with are jeopardizing their ability to perform their work, and rightly so, posing a danger to them, the ships, the marine environment, and global supply chains.

Clearly, the situation is not sustainable and immediate action is required.

On the positive note, the situation has led to an unprecedented level of cooperation within the industry, in particular among industry associations like IMO, ICS, ILO, and the ITF who have joined forces in raising awareness about the crisis and developing solutions and protocols to alleviate the crisis.

The UK Government even hosted a ministerial meeting to push the immediacy of the issue.

Thirteen countries committed to facilitating crew changes and achieving key worker designation for seafarers, following the summit, including Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Indonesia, the Netherlands, Norway, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), UK, and the United States.

Unfortunately, the industry has had little success in resolving the situation as the international community failed to take decisive action and allow seafarers to be exempt from national travel restrictions designating them essential workers.

Apart from several exemptions, there hasn’t been much willingness to act on the matter.

The desperately needed political reaction is still missing.

So, how is it possible that an industry which proudly states that it is responsible for moving 90% of the global trade has ended up in a situation where its workforce is stranded on the very ships that have kept goods moving during a global pandemic?

For one, the complexity of the crisis has diminished the potential of resolving the issue.

“The international community has done a very bad job in responding to this global crisis and there hasn’t been an adequate global response, notwithstanding the efforts of different parts of the international system, including the ILO. What we have seen is an accumulation of national responses,“  Guy Ryder, Director-General of the International Labour Office (ILO) said in a recent webinar hosted by the ICS.

Ryder believes one of the explanations for such a response, or lack thereof, is the rise of geopolitical tensions around the globe which basically quashed the appetite for global cooperation.

These tensions have led to a rise in protectionism, and in the case of a global pandemic, the majority of countries resorted to an ‘every man (country) for himself’ strategy as they shut their borders.

ILO Director-General further explained that the crisis has shown that the expected benevolent attitude of national governments to their international obligations is often non-existent, especially in cases where those governments have no national interest in meeting the obligations in question.

The very complexity of the crisis, where key considerations to be made involve health and protection of national populations have made it very easy for certain governments to turn the blind eye to the plight of seafarers, especially if they are not major labor suppliers in the sector.

However, the likely impact of shipping grinding to a halt on a global scale could easily have a ripple effect on countries and their economies across the board.

One of the most pressing arguments for the inaction of governments also seems to be the fact that shipping is an industry that preferred staying in the shadows for such a long period of time, that it doesn’t have the mechanisms or alliances strong enough to achieve results.

Hugo de Stoop, Euronav’s CEO, explained that being under the radar as a rather private industry is at the heart of the ongoing problem, hampering the industry’s plight for faster action.

De Stoop believes the way the industry has been built is a major issue, as it promoted the notion of living in the shadows, being discrete and forgotten.

“The reasons behind that are that nobody wanted to pay tax, nobody wanted to be heavily regulated so, for most, the players in the sector have chosen tiny, discrete, less influential and certainly tax-friendly places for their incorporation,” he added.

Shipowners, particularly in the container shipping sector, are known for their preference to register in countries known as tax havens and have been criticized for that on numerous occasions as such countries often have very little say with regard to enforcing international conventions and promoting higher industry standards.

According to a 2017 study from Seaintel Maritime Analysis, “there has essentially been a constant shift towards tax havens throughout the entire period from 1980 to 2017, from 12% of tonnage flagged in tax havens in 1980, to 74% in 2017, the majority of which were registered in Liberia and Panama.”

“Going forward, this is not a good solution, because if you think about Panama, the Marshall Islands, or the Bahamas you have to think about what sort of influence they have when we are facing a worldwide problem,” De Stoop said, “which is nothing, zilch“, he added.

As explained by Euronav’s CEO, tax haven countries often lack the economical power to make their voices heard at important organizations and exert pressure or influence the decision-makers to move to action.

“That is something that needs to be changed, and I believe that it can be gradually changed,” he said.

“There are a lot of private companies in the shipping world that don’t want to be in the spotlight. The result of that is that when people hear about shipping they only hear about the bad things: oil spills, sinkings, and accidents. If you want to correct this perception you need to come forward and be willing to talk about the industry much more than we have done in the past.

“It has to be our decision to talk about the industry and not being forced to talk about it because there is an event that needs to be addressed, which is usually bad,” he concluded.

Lack of appreciation for the seafarers and their work has been frustrating, to say the least.

Despite the incessant calls from the industry, it appears that the good guys end up paying the price as it has been the case with the Maersk Etienne’s crew.

The tanker has spent over one month stranded at sea after rescuing migrants from Tunisian waters, pending a solution from port authorities for the disembarkation of the affected people.

As Guy Platten, ICS Secretary-General, says, the battle for a solution continues.

Whether seafarers across the world will have to down their tools to finally be heard, or whether a new alliance of industry powers or ports states will have to be created to get the message across is yet to be seen.

One thing is certain, the sector needs to turn up the heat.

Source: offshore-energy


Rohde & Schwarz signed a contract with NTT Communications Co., Ltd.to provide a state-of-the-art IP-based, high quality and reliable maritime integrated communications system for the Philippine Coast Guard. The system, called NAVICS®, will be integrated into two 94 meter multi-role response vessels (MRRV) for the Philippine Coast Guard. The ships will be constructed by Mitsubishi Shipbuilding Co., Ltd. with completion of work and delivery scheduled for 2022.The MRRVs will be financed by the Japanese government, corresponding to Phase II of the Maritime Safety Capability Improvement Project.

Rohde & Schwarz will enhance situation awareness and improve incident reporting with dedicated data communications capabilities, including R&S Postman, a message handling solution, with Map Track, a blue force tracking functionality. This will enable the ship’s crew to effectively exchange information (voice and data) with the fleet, shore stations, other joint forces and governmental authorities. The system ensures a security architecture that allows secure, trusted and tamper-proof communications, i.e. third parties will not be able to interfere with information exchange.

“We are very proud to have been selected by the Philippine Coast Guard, MSB Shipyard together with NTT Communications for this important program,” said Jacques Jourda, Managing Director of Rohde & Schwarz Japan. “Rohde & Schwarz has provided more than 300 ship platforms with state-of-the-art communications technology. We make sure that we deliver a safe, future-ready investment for our maritime customers on time and on budget.”

In addition to external Line-of-Sight (V/UHF) and Beyond-Line-of-Sight (HF) communications, the system will provide onboard communications with smartphone-like intuitive handling. The compact Wi-Fi based wireless voice terminals provide a unique benefit of uninterrupted, high-quality communication while on the move.

Source: navalnews


Towage vessels and their crews are increasingly connected to online services during operations, increasing their vulnerability to cyber threats, malware, viruses and hackers.

These concerns were raised by the Maritime Transportation System (MTS) – Information Sharing and Analysis Center (ISAC) in the US after a tug was the victim of a phishing email.

This was the first time a tug reported receiving this type of phishing email, according to MTS-ISAC, which advised the whole maritime industry of the dangers of cyber attacks during Riviera Maritime Media’s Where port security meets cyber security webinar in August.

Its cyber security advisory said a tug operating organisation received the phishing email with a voicemail-themed attachment, then notified Louisiana InfraGard of the cyber threat, which notified MTS-ISAC.

This malware email spoofed the vessel operator as the sender and was sent to the tug with an Office 365 eVoiceMail Express-themed attachment.

MTS-ISAC analysed the offending email, headers and the attachment. It discovered one of the HTTP (hypertext transfer protocol) requests received a 404 (not found) message and the other was not flagged as malicious when examined.

However, besides spoofing the vessel operator as the sender, the MTS-ISAC noticed that the email subject line used three different fonts, which may be an indicator that similar emails were sent to other prospective victims by replacing parts of the subject line text.

The sending IP address, which was geolocating to Germany, was associated with spam and phishing by multiple open source intelligence reports since June.

MTS-ISAC has asked other organisation to contact them if they receive similar activity through this link www.mtsisac.org/contact

It hopes its advisory increases tug operators’ situational knowledge and heightens their awareness of these cyber threats to their vessels and people.

MTS-ISAC explained some of the best practices to counter malicious email attacks in its advisory. Tug operators should provide regular email awareness training to employees, including how to handle links and attachments in emails, and help them understand how to identify and report suspicious emails to a security team.

Owners of towage vessels may need to implement additional email security technologies and tools to detect and filter spam and phishing attacks. Report suspicious activity for further analysis, trending and reporting to the maritime community, through the MTS-ISAC.

During Riviera’s Maritime Cyber Security Webinar Week in August, MTS-ISAC executive director Scott Dickerson explained how ports and ship operators can secure their assets from cyber threats.

He advised maritime organisations to be vigilant to the cyber threats to their assets. “Every organisation should understand their IT, operational technology and the risks to revenue generation and business models,” said Mr Dickerson, “and manage each risk to within the defined acceptable limits of the organisation.”

Screen capture of “eVoiceMessage” email received by tug

Screen capture of “eVoiceMessage” email received by tug
Source: rivieramm

CARB to further curb exhaust emissions from ships in Californian ports

The California Air Resources Board has announced it will update its regulation on reducing pollution from ocean-going vessels while docked at California’s busiest ports.

CARB to further curb exhaust emissions from ships in Californian ports

The rule builds on the existing At-Berth Regulation (ABR). It adds new vessel categories which will be required to control pollution when in port.

Vessels covered under the existing regulation include container ships, reefer ships (refrigerated cargo vessels) and cruise ships. The updated regulation adds vehicle carriers and tankers.

The updated regulation starts in 2023, when container, reefer and cruise vessels – already included under the existing rule – will transition to the new regulation. Vehicle carriers will need to comply starting in 2025. Tankers docking at the Port of Los Angeles and the Port of Long Beach must also comply starting in 2025, while tankers in Northern California have until 2027.

The rule requires that every vessel coming into a regulated California port either use shore power or a CARB-approved control technology to reduce harmful emissions, such as applying ‘capture-and-control’ techniques on the vessel’s exhaust emissions.

Source: North P&I


Sep 05, 2020 (WiredRelease via Comtex) — MarketResearch.Biz has posted a newly modern statistical statistics, titled as Autonomous Ships Market. It is a precious supply of statistical information for Autonomous Ships market and consists of correct data, which makes use of number one and secondary studies techniques. The studies analyst gives complete statistics, which complements the increase of the industries. This report makes a specialty of the simple requirement techniques of the businesses, which facilitates to extend productivity. Additionally, it gives distinctive market segments like sensor type, deployment, end user, and region.

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AWP Marine Consultancy’s Captain Wyn Price, an active OCIMF SIRE auditor and Dania Ship Management general manager, head of vetting Torben Hertel tackled issues related to SIRE inspections and the expectations of operators.

Noting the subjective aspects of the risk management criteria oil majors employ, Mr Hertel said there is a need to address and reduce inconsistencies between oil majors’ and inspectors’ interpretations of the VIQ7 (Vessel Inspection Questionnaire, 7th Edition) questions.

As vetting “is an assessment of safety on board,” he said, there ought to be an agreed upon set of best practice standards for tanker vetting.

Recognising the value of Port State Control (PSC) inspections, Mr Hertel said there are many countries where PSC is “a little bit challenging, and again here, we as operators and vessel owners sometimes suffer from over-enthusiastic PSC inspectors”.

In light of the need for vetting to create value and enhanced transparency, Mr Hertel said it is debateable if the SIRE programme is still fit for purpose or needs updating.

He said it may be time to bring in more robust ways of measuring safety, perhaps by introducing a safety score system in contrast to traditional vetting practices.

With Dania’s parent company V.Group running ShipSure, a digital data-collection platform, Mr Hertel said there may be instances where a ship undergoes a poor vetting process but the data trends observed via ShipSure may indicate the vessel is in fact safe.

“What we need is an assessment of safety, not a single inspection snapshot of the vessel,” he said.

Some 88% of webinar attendees said they agree it is time for the tanker vetting process to be renewed or re-thought with 12% disagreeing, and 68% said they think that the vetting system encourages trust and transparency with 32% disagreeing.

Captain Price said he believes that SIRE remains an important way of benchmarking safety and that physical inspections remain a key part of the safety process.

PSC inspections have become more integral to the overall vetting process which in turn has increased scrutiny of SIRE reports. He added that the system currently works so that as PSC inspectors become more highly trained, their reports gain more credibility.

However, SIRE’s aims are shifting, Captain Price said, and VIQ7 is more focused toward crew competence, which is, in his view, the appropriate area to focus on in the future. He said priority should be given to training and competence of seafarers and demonstration of operational knowledge on board and that paperwork should be reduced.

Only 14% of inspection observations concerned crew competence according to a poll of attendees, with machinery maintenance, cosmetic and navigation issues making up 31% and the majority concerned with safety management practices, at 65%.

Panellists encouraged vessel owners and operators to make the most out of SIRE inspections by training staff with the VIQ and how to engage with inspectors. As Captain Price said “Very often I find that the vessel staff are not aware of what the inspector requires and often they are quite distracted from the inspection itself and have no real interest in the process.”

In response to a question that different SIRE inspectors come to different outcomes when vetting the same vessel, Captain Price said this may indicate a lack of understanding on the part of the inspectors but that vessel staff may also give differing responses to questions as “different personnel may understand questions in a different way”. From the inspection side, inspectors are offered a refresher course as part of their training to help interpret new legislation.

While a self-assessment by the vessel staff can provide a useful benchmark for the inspector, Captain Price said the physical inspection is indispensable and that the remote SIRE inspection programme “must be used as a temporary measure” as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic.

By a slim margin, webinar attendees agreed with this view, with 51% of them backing remote inspections exclusively where physical inspection is impossible.

You can view this webinar and all of the webinars from Riviera’s Tanker Shipping & Trade Webinar Week, in full, in our webinar library.

News: rivieramm


London. UK. Human Rights at Sea today issues the latest of its Insight Briefing Notes covering P&I Insurance Coverage & Seafarers’ Rights during the COVID-19 pandemic. Researched by Jessie Santana-Carvalho LL.M. (Maritime Law), the Briefing Note outlines key considerations for seafarers, as well as considerations for P&I clubs. The document was submitted to the International Group of P&I Clubs.

Introduction

Maritime transport is the predominant engine of global trade and economic growth. The pace of this engine was heavily disrupted by the persistence and intensification of the COVID-19 pandemic; thereby plunging the world into disarray as continually observed with nations wrestling to contain the virus expediently and efficiently before it impedes the import and export of affordable food and goods.

The acceleration of this crisis placed an enormous toll upon trade, tourism, and safety at work in a manner that has sharpened the collective thought process of shipowners’ ongoing operations and their protection and indemnity (P&I) coverage.

Quarantine rules within P&I cover had never come under scrutiny, until this pandemic exposed an undeniable pattern of systemic risk. Whilst giving up civic freedoms to save lives might serve well in the interim; to manage such a widespread health crisis, such quarantine measures are not without social and economic consequence.

Ship owners have been compelled to navigate complex restrictions to mitigate the risk of their liability

Read More & Download below:

Insight Briefing Note: COVID-19 P&I Insurance Coverage & Seafarers’ Rights

“Quarantine rules within P&I cover had never come under scrutiny, until this pandemic exposed an undeniable pattern of systemic risk.” Download our latest Insight Briefing Note (14 MB) covering the expected cover from P&I insurance during the COVID-19 pandemic.


Mikal Bøe’s Core-Power sketches in bold terms the unique perspectives of this energy source, which would overshadow all other possible ways of emission-free propulsion. In fact, he claims it would be the only viable cost-effective, safe zero-emission technology.

Atomic battery

This is not ‘old’ nuclear technology with light water reactors, such as those used on submarines, aircraft carriers and icebreakers, but new advanced ‘atomic battery technology’. Other alternatives, such as hydrogen and ammonia as fuel, are far too expensive and unsafe, according to Core-Power.

The basis of the story is the maritime Molten Salt Reactor (m-MSR). It is based on a technology developed as early as the 1950s. It uses a fluid fuel in the form of very hot fluoride or chloride salt infused with a “hot” fissile material, instead of solid fuel rods which are used in conventional pressurised nuclear reactors.

m-MSRs have no moving parts, operate at very high temperatures under only ambient pressure, and can be made small enough to provide micro-grid-scale electric power for energy hungry assets, like large ships. Because of this, they can be mass-manufactured to bring the cost of energy down below that of gas, diesel and even renewables, according to Core-Power.

Experiments

Despite an endless series of experiments, the technology has so far produced barely functioning systems. On paper, MSRs have great advantages over conventional reactors. For example, they can basically operate at normal air pressure, where light water reactors require a pressure of up to 150 atmospheres. As a result, the construction of an MSR is, in principle, much cheaper.

Core-Power states that ‘the fuel is the coolant of an MSR and the coolant is the fuel, which cannot leak away’. What happened in Chernobyl or Fukushima is unthinkable with an m-MSR,’ says the start-up. According to the company, ‘excitement is growing in the maritime sector’ because MSRs can power large ships such as supertankers and 24,000 TEU container ships completely electrically for thirty years without having to refuel.

Consortium

The company, which is also based in Singapore, says it works with ‘a consortium of leading m-MSR developers’. However, it is unclear which parties they are. Nor does Core-Power give any indication of the development costs or the price of such a m-MSR, nor of the dimensions of such an installation.

On its site, however, the company is very optimistic about the pace at which shipping can switch to the use of atomic batteries. The current fleet of an estimated 40,000 smaller ships could already start sailing on synthetic ‘electro fuels’ such as green ammonia, which is produced with atomic power MSRs, in the period 2024-2028.

And from 2028, a new generation of large ships with their own reactor would come into service, which would never have to refuel again. Moreover, they will be bigger, faster and cheaper than the current ships, Core-Power promises. In short, the technology opens up ‘a new future for global shipping’. Anyone who has confidence in it, is very welcome to invest.

This article first appeared in Dutch on Nieuwsblad Transport, a publication of SWZ|Maritime’s publishing partner Promedia.


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