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Ship Characteristics and Operations

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Title: Ship Characteristics and Operations


1
Ship Characteristics and Operations
  • Presented at Columbia University
  • 14 October 2003
  • Presented by Peter K. Wallace
  • Knickerbocker Maritime
  • Peter.wallace_at_knickerbocker-maritime.com
  • www.knickerbocker-maritime.com

2
Introduction
  • Discuss ships and their operations.
  • Description of operations
  • Physical characteristics of ships
  • Will NOT cover the trade patterns or the
    commercial/financial aspects of shipping.

3
Strengths of Shipping
  • Multinational
  • Mature
  • Physical
  • World market with world real currency/trading
  • When goods dont cross borders, armies do.

4
Weaknesses of Shipping
  • Perceived to be a Black Art
  • Low Returns
  • High Risk
  • Large Liability
  • The problem is that shipping is like the larger
    world in which it operatesan inherently
    disorderly affair, existing mostly beyond the
    reach of nations and their laws, beyond the dikes
    and coastal horizons, and out across the open
    seas. It is not exactly a criminal industry, but
    it is an amoral and stubbornly anarchic one. And
    it admits as much about itself

5
Types of Ships
  • Energy is transported on various types of
    specialized ships
  • Tankers
  • Crude
  • Clean and Dirty Product
  • There are other tanker types such as food grade
    and chemical
  • LNGLiquefied Natural Gas
  • LPGLiquefied Petroleum Gas
  • Others include Bulkers (thermal coal) and Nuclear

6
Ship Sizes (Tankers)
Source Poten Partners
7
Various Ships
8
Tanker industry Responsibility Chain
SHIPOWNER
CLASS SOCIETIES
CHARTERER
SHIPYARDS
CARGO OWNER
INSURERS
PORT AUTHORITIES TERMINALS
FLAG STATES
PILOTS
9
Governing Bodies
  • International Maritime Organization (IMO)
  • Classification Societies (IACS, Class)
  • Port State
  • Flag State
  • NGOs Intertanko, Intercargo, BIMCO

10
Major Operating Codes
  • ISM/ISOOperating Documentation and Compliance
  • STCWCrew Qualifications
  • MARPOLPollution Prevention
  • SOLASSafety and Life Saving
  • ISPSShip and Port Security

11
(No Transcript)
12
Owners, Operators and Managers
  • Shipowners
  • Operators
  • Commercial Managers
  • Technical Managers
  • Specialty Managers--Crew Managers
  • All varieties of operating models are common.
    Many firms use a variety of models on a
    case-by-case basis.

13
Commercial Chain
14
Operation Chain
15
Characteristics of Shipping--Flags
  • Flags of Convenience (non-ITF)
  • Open Registry (ITFno other restrictions)
  • National Flag(tight citizenship/build/trade
    restrictions)
  • Paris MOU List

16
Paris MOU List
17
Characteristics of Shipping--Insurance
  • Insurance divided into several categories.
  • Protection and Indemnity (PI)club arrangement
    (self insurance)
  • Hull and Machinerymore traditional, but somewhat
    self insured
  • Cargotraditional insurance.
  • COFR and other large lines Disaster insurance.
    Large coverage on small asset base.

18
Characteristics of Shipping--Crewing
  • National/Multi-National
  • ITF, non-ITF (International Transport Federation)

19
Characteristics of Ships--General Arrangement
  • General ArrangementThis is a picture of the ship
    which provides a good indication of the major
    systems, structures and general idea of the
    vessel. The details are subjects of other
    extensive manuals and drawings.

20
GA--Pre-MARPOL VLCC
21
Ship Systems--Basic Outline
  • Compartmentalization
  • Structures
  • Cargo/Ballast Handling System
  • Tank Cleaning
  • Propulsion
  • Navigation

22
Ship Systems--Compartmentalization
  • Pre-Marpol--Mixed Ballast and Cargo
  • Marpol--Single Hulls with Segregated Ballast
  • Double Hull--Protective Hull
  • DH vessels have had problems with sloshing and
    stability
  • Pre-Marpol Vessels have had pollution and
    corrosion problems
  • Marpol vessels have had capacity problems

23
Capacity Plan--VLCC
24
Capacity Plan--Double Hull
25
Ship Systems--Structures
26
Ship Systems Cargo/Ballast Handling System
Single Hull VL
27
Ship Systems Tank Cleaning
28
Ship Systems Tank Cleaning
29
Ship Systems Propulsion
30
Ship Systems Propulsion
31
Ship Systems Propulsion
32
Ship Systems Navigation
  • 100 years ago Sextants, chronometers and charts
  • 30 years ago CASS Loran C and Omega
  • 15 years ago GPS
  • 5 years ago Electronic charts

33
Safety Systems Basic Outline
  • Structures and Compartmentalization
  • Fire Fighting
  • Inert Gas
  • Miscellaneous

34
Safety Systems Structures and
Compartmentalization
  • SHOW GA of DH

35
Safety Systems Fire Fighting
  • Fires are among the most serious of shipboard
    problems. It is rivaled only by an incident
    which compromises the hull to the point of break
    up and sinking.
  • Fire Fighting is divided into multiple systems
    with redundancy.
  • Water
  • Foam
  • Halon or CO2

36
Safety Systems Inert Gas
37
Safety Systems Inert Gas
38
Safety Systems Miscellaneous
  • There are many miscellaneous safety and life
    saving systems and appliances.
  • Emergency Towing Systems
  • Safe Access to Bow
  • Life Boats and Life Rafts
  • Fire Wires

39
Safety Systems Miscellaneous
40
Classification
  • PurposeIndependent Verification of vessel
    construction and operation
  • OrganizationsClass Societies
  • Basic Services--Plan Review, Surveys
  • Enhanced ServicesISM/ISO, CAP/CAS
  • Additional ServicesPM, Spill Response,
    Additional Analyses

41
Other Indicators of Quality
  • Class Societies and owner/operators have been
    under increasing attack in the past 15 years.
    Thus, charterers/oilcos use Vetting, CAP and open
    Questionnaires as commercial requirements.
    Tankers and LNG/LPG are leading the rest of the
    shipping industry in these areas.
  • Vetting
  • CAP
  • Transparency

42
Spill/Emergency Response
  • Spill/Emergency Response is a result of OPA 90
    and other incidents.
  • Basic Elements include
  • Engineering
  • Salvage
  • Media Response
  • Cleanup
  • Commercial and Liability Response
  • Some areas require escort tugs in sensitive areas

43
Ports and Port Characteristics
  • A wide variety of ports and port facilities
  • LocationsAccessible and less than accessible
  • OffshoreSPM or F(P)SOs
  • OnshoreRivers, bays, harbors
  • LighteringOffshore

44
Ports--Offshore Bouy
45
Ports--F(P)SO/FSU
46
Ports--Shore Terminal
47
Ports--Lightering
48
Ports--Lightering
49
Trends in Design and Operation
  • Move towards LNG, LPG and Product
  • Crude is moving towards Afra and Suez rather than
    VLCC/ULCC. There is still VLCC building, but not
    on the same scales. ULCCs, with the Hellespont
    exceptions, have not been built in a very long
    time.
  • Why? Just in Time for refineries. Basic
    refinery work at production sites, shift toward
    gas for energy.
  • Liability and Flexibility

50
Recommended Reading
  • The Prize
  • Commanding Heights
  • Maritime Economics
  • The Invisible Billionaire
  • The Shipbreakers (Atlantic Monthly, August 2000)
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