WILSON MALM

Type Date of Build FlagValue RegisterValue Port of Regestry
General Cargo (single deck) 1980-06-01 Malta VALLETTA
IMO Number Official Number Call Sign
7810210 8620 9HUH7
Legnth Breadth Gross tonnage Net tonnage Deadweight tonnage
107 15.04 3967 2212 5995

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WILSON MALM Owner, Manager, Shipyard

A/S Storviks mek. Verksted

<p>A/S Storviks Mekaniske Verksted is a specialized company based in Norway, primarily known for its engineering expertise and industrial services. The company has a long-standing reputation for providing mechanical

Maritime News

Exmar Takes Delivery of 'World's First' Oceangoing Ammonia Dual-Fuel Vessel

Exmar Takes Delivery of 'World's First' Oceangoing Ammonia Dual-Fuel Vessel

5 hours ago
Exmar has taken delivery of MGC ANTWERPEN, deemed by the Belgian shipping company as the world's first oceangoing vessel powered by a dual-fuel ammonia engine.The newbuild mid-size gas carrier is capable of carrying up to 46,000 cubic meters of ammonia or liquefied petroleum gas and can operate with close to zero emissions when fueled by low-carbon ammonia.Exmar said the vessel was developed in collaboration with HD Hyundai Heavy Industries, WinGD, Nord Gas Solutions and Lloyd's Register.
Al-Designed CTV Saves 100,000 Liters of Fuel, 258 Tons of CO2 a Year

Al-Designed CTV Saves 100,000 Liters of Fuel, 258 Tons of CO2 a Year

yesterday
Compute Maritime, the deep tech company behind NeuralShipper, the world's first Al platform for ship design, has revealed the results of its UK Government-funded project, GenDSOM, to bring generative Al and additive manufacturing into ship design.Working with consortium partners Siemens Digital Industries Software, Rapid Fusion, HP, BYD Naval Architects and the University of Southampton, the project has produced a next-generation crew transfer vessel (CTV) for the offshore wind sector that, in detailed performance modeling, saves 101,671 liters of fuel and 258.7 tons of CO2 per vessel every year compared with a conventional baseline.The designed vessel, a 32.
US Disables Tanker; Indian Crew Safe After Fire

US Disables Tanker; Indian Crew Safe After Fire

2 days ago
U.S. forces disabled an unladen oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman on Monday after it attempted to sail to an Iranian port in violation of the ongoing blockade against Iran, the U.S. military said.U.S. Central Command said in a post on X that the M/T Marivex, a Palau-flagged vessel, was transiting international waters in the Gulf of Oman toward Iran when it was targeted.An F/A-18 Super Hornet from the USS Abraham Lincoln fired a precision munition into the ship's engineering and steering spaces after the crew failed to comply with directions from U.S. forces, CENTCOM said."Marivex is no longer sailing to Iran," it said.
Methanol Fuel Retrofit Developed for Inland and Coastal Marine

Methanol Fuel Retrofit Developed for Inland and Coastal Marine

2 days ago
A dual fuel combustion system developed by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in collaboration with Caterpillar Inc. addresses the challenge of methanol ignition in diesel engines, with clear relevance for inland and coastal marine vessels.Methanol is typically produced from natural gas, an abundant domestic resource, and converting it into a liquid allows easier storage and handling. However, methanol does not ignite easily, creating a barrier for vessels that rely on compression-ignition diesel engines.ORNL’s approach pairs methanol with a small amount of diesel used as a pilot fuel to start combustion, enabling methanol dual fuel operation across a much wider range of conditions.
Moving Freight on Inland Waterways takes Public, Private Sector Collaboration

Moving Freight on Inland Waterways takes Public, Private Sector Collaboration

39 minutes ago
As weather extremes, aging infrastructure and growing freight demands place increasing pressure on the U.S. inland waterway system, industry and government leaders say one factor is indispensable to maintaining reliable navigation: collaboration.That was the central message from a panel discussion during FreightWeekSTL 2026, where representatives from American Commercial Barge Line (ACBL) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers discussed how coordinated planning, shared data and targeted infrastructure investments are helping keep commerce moving on the Mississippi River.