Maritime Vessels Directory
Filters
- Type
- Barge (1)
- Offshore Support Vessel (2)
- Tank Barge (2)
- Flag
- Belize (1)
- Republic of Indonesia (2)
- United States of America (2)
- Port
- BATAM (2)
- BELIZE CITY (1)
- PHILADELPHIA, PA (2)
- Companies
- Gross Tonnage
- 2100 (5)
MARIDIVE 603
Offshore Support Vessel | Flag: Belize | Port: BELIZE CITY
MP PREVAIL
Offshore Support Vessel | Flag: Republic of Indonesia | Port: BATAM
THE RECYCLER
Tank Barge | Flag: United States of America | Port: PHILADELPHIA, PA
THE RESOURCE
Tank Barge | Flag: United States of America | Port: PHILADELPHIA, PA
WAHANA 258
Barge | Flag: Republic of Indonesia | Port: BATAM
Maritime News
Fortescue Charters Up to 12 Ammonia-Capable Bulkers from CMB.TECH
Australian mining company Fortescue has signed an agreement with Belgian shipping and cleantech group CMB.TECH to charter up to 12 ammonia-capable bulk carriers, stepping up efforts to decarbonize maritime transport and support the development of green ammonia as a marine fuel.Under the agreement, Fortescue will charter 12 Newcastlemax dry bulk vessels, each with a carrying capacity of 210,000 deadweight tonnes, from Bocimar, the dry bulk shipping arm of CMB.TECH.Up to three of the vessels will be delivered with dual-fuel ammonia engines and are expected to enter service by the end of 2026
Korean Partners to Develop Robotic “Total Hull Care Solution”
HD Hyundai Heavy Industries and five other HD Hyundai affiliates are embarking on the development of a robot and data-based integrated hull management solution that automates the entire process—from hull diagnosis to cleaning and performance verification—for the first time in the shipbuilding industry.HD Hyundai Heavy Industries signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for the joint development and commercialization of the "Total Hull Care Solution" with affiliates HD Korea Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering, HD Hyundai Robotics, HD Hyundai Marine Solution, and Avicus, as well as with KCC, a specialist in marine paints, and TAS Global, a specialist in underwater robots.
ABS and Partners to Develop Conditional Unmanned Bridge
ABS, Polaris Shipping, HD Hyundai Heavy Industries (HHI) and autonomous navigation solutions provider AVIKUS have signed a four-party Concept Study Agreement for the implementation of a Conditional Unmanned Bridge.Under the agreement, the parties will jointly develop an autonomous navigation concept enabling unmanned bridge operation during deep-sea voyages, when defined conditions are met, on one of Polaris Shipping's 325K Very Large Ore Carriers (VLOCs).The concept is not a fully unmanned operation across the entire voyage. Rather, it is a phased autonomous navigation concept under which the bridge is left unmanned only under specific low-risk conditions, such as open-ocean passage.
Qatari LNG Carriers Re-Enter Hormuz as Traffic Through Strait Slumps
Four liquefied natural gas tankers controlled by Qatar headed into the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, despite a fall in ship traffic after Iran announced that it had again closed the waterway over the weekend, shipping data showed.The tankers - Wadi Al Sail, Mekaines, Al Sadd and Mesaimeer - entered the strait via the Iranian route for the first time since the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran started, shiptracking data from analytics firm Kpler showed.QatarEnergy, whose LNG exports have been heavily curbed since the war began on February 28, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Brent Oil Remains On Track for 8% Weekly Decline as Israel, Hezbollah Agree to Ceasefire
Brent crude ticked slightly higher on Friday but was still on track for a more than 8% weekly decline after Israel and Hezbollah agreed to a ceasefire and tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz increased.Brent crude futures were up 20 cents, or 0.25%, at $80.05 a barrel by 10:55 a.m. ET, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was up 25 cents, or 0.33%, at $76.85 per barrel.Trading volumes were light due to a U.S. federal holiday.Oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz picked up on Friday after the signing of the deal, with Gulf producers preparing to raise exports despite concerns over conditions set by Tehran for using the vital waterway.