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Shipyards
Dutch operator, EcoClipper's first sailing vessel, De Tukker which departed Den Helder to Friesland to the Talsma Shipyard (above) is to be retrofitted for sustainable shipping. De Tukker will be registered as a Sailing General Cargo Vessel with a trading area in the North Sea, Irish Sea and in the Baltic.
The Talsma Shipyard and sustainable shipping company EcoClipper B.V. this week announced in Alkmaar, The Netherlands, in finalising a partnership to complete work on retrofitting sailing vessel De Tukker which is to trade in the North Sea, the Irish Sea…
Newbuilds for CalMac, the Glen Sannox one of the dual-fuel ferries at Ferguson Marine on the Clyde. The construction cost to complete the pair at the Scottish state-owned shipyard could be as high as £400m.
Construction costs to complete two (CalMac) ferries at the Scottish state-owned Ferguson Marine shipyard could be as high as £400 million, that's according to a former Scottish Government shipbuilding adviser. As the SundayPost reports, ex-commodore Luke van Beek made the…
'Embarrassment' as a two CalMac ferries (owned by the Scottish govenment) to be built in Turkey. The new ferries are to serve the south-west Scottish island of Islay, located to the west of the Mull of Kintyre. Above in this AFLOAT photo is one of two current ferries operating to Islay, the ageing Hebridean Isles (built 1985) when berthed at Kennacraig on the Mull Peninsula.
A shipyard in Turkey has won a £105 million contract to build two new lifeline CalMac ferries for the south-west Scottish island of Islay. Cemre Marin Endustri has been announced as the preferred bidder for the order against three other…
UK Shipbuilding Strategy is welcomed by Society of Maritime Industries CEO Tom Chant who heads the trade association representing UK maritime engineering sector
The publication of the UK National Shipbuilding Strategy refresh today by the British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Merseyside, has been welcomed by the Society of Maritime Industries.  SMI CEO Tom Chant said: "The Society of Maritime Industries has played…
Harland & Wolff's Belfast shipyard site
InsiderMedia reports that Harland & Wolff Group Holdings has secured a "milestone" $70m (£53.3m) green corporate debt facility to help drive forward its growth plans. The listed business, which is focused on strategic infrastructure projects and physical asset lifecycle management,…
The Eduard Toll docking in Belfast Harbour at the weekend, Afloat adds from Zeebrugge in Belgium. H&W said the LNG tanker is the largest vessel to dock in the yard since acquisition in 2019.
Shipyard Harland & Wolff has welcomed its biggest vessel in the Belfast facility's recent history as the Eduard Toll docked at the weekend. The mammoth LNG tanker ship is currently in place at Harland & Wolff’s building dock, although the…
UK shipyards, the A&P Group and Cammel Laird of Birkenhead along with Isle of Wight operator, Red Funnel have announced a new Apprenticeship Partnership Agreement. AFLOAT adds In 2019 the Merseyside shipyard built Red Funnel's freight-only ro-ro vessel, Red Kestrel (above on maiden sailing) departing Southampton for the Isle of Wight. The company also operate a passenger car ferry fleet including a 'Raptor' class (as berthed) at the English south coast port.
In the UK two shipyards, the A&P Group and Cammell Laird along with Isle of Wight ferry operator, Red Funnel have announced a new Apprenticeship Partnership Agreement. The partnership will result in apprentices from all three companies being offered the chance…
Applications for Harland & Wolff Welding Academy are now open and based initially at the shipyard group's Belfast site. The new training programme will lead to a classification society welding certification and full-time employment.
Shipyard Harland & Wolff yesterday opened applications for a new training programme which will lead to a welding certification and a full-time job. The welding academy (prospective employees should send their CV to [email protected]) is held in partnership with Northern Regional…
Operator CLdN has signed an order for a pair of Hybird freight ferries which will be largest short-sea Ro Ro vessels operating in the world. This accolade AFLOAT adds applied with MV Celine, which was christened in a ceremony at Dublin Port in 2018. The then newbuild dubbed the 'Brexit-Buster' is seen afterwards in Dublin Bay during its maiden 'return' sailing to mainland Europe. A sister Dephine also entered service.
Operator, CLdN Ro-Ro S.A. of Luxembourg, has signed a contract for two hybrid 8,000 lane meter ro-ro vessels with South Korean shipyard Hyundai Mipo Dockyards. The order signed on 1 February, forms part of CLdN’s long term growth plans and…
Scottish shipyard ferry Glen Sannox involved (see video) in dramatic scenes during Storm Malik.
One of the newbuild ferries at the centre of Scotland's shipbuilding fiasco was involved in a fresh drama as it had to face the rigours of Storm Malik. The beleaguered would-be lifeline ferry Glen Sannox which has been languishing at…
At the Scottish state-owned shipyard of Ferguson Marine, chairman Alistair Mackenzie who was at the centre of the ferry fiasco has stepped down
At the beleaguered Scottish state-owned shipyard company of Ferguson Marine, the chairman at the centre of the (CalMac) ferry-building fiasco has stepped down. Current chairman Alistair Mackenzie and board member John Hudson are both stepping down from their roles at…
H&W Group have announced their 2022 investors' events programme. Above at Belfast, one of the group's four shipyard sites, a team welcomed its first vessel this year when in January, Afloat adds ICG's/ Irish Ferries cruiseferry Ulysses was dry-docked during annual routine work which takes place in the quieter winter season.
Harland & Wolff Group is aiming to update investors and financial professionals on their progress and outlook for the future, with the announcement of sharing their 2022 investor events programme which will be held across all the group's four shipyard…
Completion in Scotland of the first of two long-delayed CalMac ferries by the revised date of September will be “challenging”, with Covid cases likely to cause “significant” disruption this month. The first newbuild, Glen Sannox on the Clyde last month at the Ferguson Marine shipyard in Port Glasgow.
The completion of the first of two long-delayed CalMac ferries by the shipyard's revised date of September will be “challenging”, with Covid cases likely to cause “significant” disruption this month, a Ferguson Marine chief has told MSPs. The Port Glasgow…
Shipyard of H&W with the famous iconic Samson and Goliath cranes that are landmarks in Belfast Harbour and the city.
The famous Harland and Wolff shipyard cranes of Samson and Goliath in Belfast were insured for £9 million in 1976 — the equivalent of £60 million today. A company memo in February that year revealed the insurance policy, at an…
The turnaround boss of Ferguson Marine,Clydeside, leaves before delayed Calmac pair of ferries are completed.
The boss brought in to turn around the fortunes of the nationalised Scottish shipyard building the delayed CalMac ferries is leaving his post. Tim Hair has earned almost £1.3m for 454 days’ work since being appointed to lead Ferguson Marine by…
Arklow Cloud during an earlier phase of modular block construction as can be seen the upper superstructure /deckhouse's positioning at Ferus Smit's shipyard in the Netherlands, from where today the newbuild presented a spectular amidships launch into the ‘Winschoterdiep’ canal. See link below for video.
Despite dull skies, a spectacular launch took place at a Dutch shipyard this morning of Arklow Shipping's latest newbuild which increases the fleet total to 58 cargoships, writes Jehan Ashmore The single-hold newbuild Arklow Cloud, a name used for the…

Shipyards

Afloat will be focusing on news and developments of shipyards with newbuilds taking shape on either slipways and building halls.

The common practice of shipbuilding using modular construction, requires several yards make specific block sections that are towed to a single designated yard and joined together to complete the ship before been launched or floated out.

In addition, outfitting quays is where internal work on electrical and passenger facilities is installed (or upgraded if the ship is already in service). This work may involve newbuilds towed to another specialist yard, before the newbuild is completed as a new ship or of the same class, designed from the shipyard 'in-house' or from a naval architect consultancy. Shipyards also carry out repair and maintenance, overhaul, refit, survey, and conversion, for example, the addition or removal of cabins within a superstructure. All this requires ships to enter graving /dry-docks or floating drydocks, to enable access to the entire vessel out of the water.

Asides from shipbuilding, marine engineering projects such as offshore installations take place and others have diversified in the construction of offshore renewable projects, from wind-turbines and related tower structures. When ships are decommissioned and need to be disposed of, some yards have recycling facilities to segregate materials, though other vessels are run ashore, i.e. 'beached' and broken up there on site. The scrapped metal can be sold and made into other items.