Maritime Companies Directory
Filters
- New Zealand (14)
Bell Design Group Limited
Design for new build and refits
Freight Services Ltd
International Freight Forwarder & Customs Agents
Lomocean design limited
Naval architecture and yacht design
Navicom Dynamics Ltd
Marine GPS Navigation Systems Manufacturer
NIWA
NIWA is an internationally respected research organisation dedicated to creating and delivery innovative and unrialled science-based products and services that enable people and businesses to make best use of the natural environment.
Paragon Products
Importer and applicator
Safety At Sea ( Australasia) Ltd
Specialist Marine company, ITT distributor
Safety At Sea (Australasia) Ltd
Marine Safety Specialist, sales and service
Sea Devil Products 2001 Ltd
Marine Navigation Aids
seadevilproducts.com
Marine Navigation suppliers amd manufactures
Sensation Yachts
Builder of Super and Megayachts
So-Pac Marine Ltd
Distributor of Marine Equipment
Teknicraft Design
Catamaran Design Service
Maritime News

FLOATING POWER: Seatrium, Karpowership Ink Pact for FSRU Conversions
Seatrium Limited signed a Letter of Intent (LOI) with Karpowership, a global energy company and the owner, operator, and builder of the world’s largest Powership (floating power plant) fleet.Under the LOI, Seatrium will carry out the integration of four New Generation Powerships, with an option for two additional units. Karpowership will deliver the hulls and key equipment for the four Powerships to Seatrium Singapore, where integration works will begin in the first quarter of 2027. Seatrium’s scope of work includes mechanical and electrical, equipment integration, mechanical completion, and pre-commissioning.

Colonna’s Shipyard: Forged in Steel, Anchored in Legacy
Colonna’s Shipyard is a fifth-generation, family-owned medium-sized shipbuilder, led by Randall Crutchfield, Chairman & CEO, today. Founded in 1875 by 26-year-old ship carpenter Charles J. Colonna with a $2,000 loan from his brother, he founded a company that has not only withstood the test of time, but today stands ready as a multi-faceted ‘blue collar industrial complex’ to help in the effort to effectively rebuild the U.S. shipbuilding base, and more specifically to help rebuild the U.S. Navy and U.S. government-owned fleet of ships. In an industry where tradition meets transformation, Colonna’s Shipyard stands out.

U.S. Threatens IMO Members
The U.S. on Tuesday rejected the "Net-Zero Framework" proposal by the IMO, which is aimed at reducing global greenhouse gas emissions from the international shipping sector, and threatened measures against countries that support it.The announcement, made in a joint statement by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, comes ahead of a vote at the United Nations' shipping agency to adopt the net-zero proposal in October.It also comes as the Trump administration uses tariffs as a tool to influence the behavior of leaders of other nations, including China, India and Brazil, and as the U.S.

Chinese Vessels Collide During Scarborough Shoal Interference
The Philippines expressed serious concern on Tuesday over what it described as "dangerous manoeuvres and unlawful interference" by Chinese vessels during a coast guard supply mission for Filipino fishermen in the Scarborough Shoal on Monday."Their actions not only posed a grave danger to Philippine personnel and vessels, but also resulted in the unfortunate collision between the two Chinese vessels," the Philippine foreign ministry said in a statement.A Chinese navy ship collided with a smaller coast guard vessel while the latter was chasing one of the Philippine Coast Guard ships involved in the mission, according to the PCG, which captured the incident on video.

Orsted Shares Plunge as it Seeks $9.4B to U.S. Wind Power Project
Shares in Orsted plunged to a record low on Monday as the wind farm developer asked shareholders for $9.4 billion to help fund a U.S. project, after potential partners were put off by U.S. President Donald Trump's hostility to wind power.The 60 billion crowns ($9.4 billion) rights issue is worth around half of the Danish company's market value as of Friday's close.Struggling in recent years with soaring inflation and logistical problems that sent costs soaring, the offshore wind industry faced a further setback when Trump suspended licensing on his first day back in office in January."Orsted and our industry are in an extraordinary situation with the adverse market development in the U.S.