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Belfast shipbuilder, the Harland & Wolff Group have cut the first steel on a new cable barge it is building for defence contractor KBS Maritime of Portsmouth from where the vessel will be located at the UK’s main naval base.

To mark the steel cutting, a ceremony took place at Harland & Wolff's Appledore shipyard, north Devon. Attending the occasion at the English yard were technical representatives from KBS Maritime and H&W’s engineering team.

The contract valued at approximately £800,000, is to see the Harland & Wolff designed vessel be delivered this Spring, with the specialist cable barge to enter service at the Royal Navy’s main naval base at Portsmouth, Hampshire.

All construction work will be carried out at the Appledore in parallel with existing defence and commercial projects currently underway at the shipyard located near Bideford.

KBS Maritime Ltd is a joint venture between KBR and BAE Systems and delivers hard facilities management and alongside services to support the Portsmouth naval flotilla.

The new cable barge will be used by KBS Maritime as a floating platform to lower anchors and associated cables chains from naval ships so that they can be tested and refurbished as required. The newbuild is to support operations for existing mine-hunters and frigates and when commissioned their successors of the new Type 26’s and Type 31’s.

Naval architects at Harland & Wolff have worked closely with KBS Maritime’s engineering team during the design phase to incorporate features that will improve the safety, capability and efficiency of alongside operations.

An existing barge which remains in service and for over the past 25 years, has been heavily modified and the learnings from these modifications have been incorporated into the newbuild design.

Published in Shipyards

About World Ocean Day 

World Ocean Day is celebrated annually on June 8th to highlight the important role the ocean has for our life and the planet. The focus each year is on the 30x30 campaign: to create a healthy ocean with abundant wildlife and to stabilise the climate, it is critical that 30% of our planet’s lands, waters, and oceans are protected by 2030.  

One of the issues affecting our ocean is marine litter which has become a global problem for both humans and marine life. However, communities around Ireland have demonstrated their desire to be part of the solution by taking part in several beach cleaning and clean-up calls to action. 

Statistics show that the number one cause of marine litter is litter dropped in towns and cities.

In 2021, the initiative changed its name from “World Oceans Day” to “World Ocean Day”. By dropping the “s”, its organisers wanted to highlight the fact that we are all connected by a large ocean. This shared ocean supports all life on the planet, by producing most of the oxygen we breathe and regulating climate. No matter where we live, we all depend on the ocean to survive.

This means that each piece of marine litter removed from a beach, river, lake, park or street in Ireland, will have a positive impact on a global scale.

At A Glance - World Ocean Day is on June 8th each year

United Nations World Ocean Day is celebrated annually on June 8th to highlight the important role the ocean has for our life and the planet.

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