TOWLINES
01 Jan 2007
Following the successful introduction of the anchor handling tugs Tempest and Typhoon, Netherlands based International Transport Contractors (ITC) has decided to strengthen their position in the offshore support market with the purchase of two anchor handling tug supply vessels.
The 140 tons bollard pull Maersk Leader and Maersk Lifter, built in 1987 and 1988 respectively, were due to be taken over early this month. With 12,000 bhp engines capable of burning heavy fuel and with the possibility of increasing bunker capacity the vessels are expected to fit in very well with the current ITC fleet.
The single screw tug Lowgarth, renovated and operated for a short time by an Essex UK based owner, has been sold to Fendercare Marine Ltd UK and is expected to be used in conjunction with the company’s business in West Africa. Lowgarth was originally one of a series of similar shiphandling tugs built in the mid-1960s. It is a vessel of 152 gross tons, powered by a 920bhp Ruston diesel.
D. Little Engineering Ltd of Milford Haven has made the 1,285bhp tug Intrepid B available on the coastal and marine civil engineering market. Intrepid B was completely rebuilt by McDuff Shipyards in 2002, originally to work in the difficult environment of Cardigan Bay under contract to the Ministry of Defence. The 27m single screw vessel has an 8.9m beam, a large open stern and work deck, a powerful crane and a bollard pull of 20 tons.
The major Belgian dredging and reclamation contractor, Jan De Nul Group, has placed an order with Damen for a total of three workboats. One vessel will be the first of the newly developed Damen Stan Tug 1606, the successor to the popular Stan Tug 1605 design of which over 100 units were built. The remaining pair will be of the Damen Fast Crew Supplier 1605 type designed for the transportation of 20 persons at speeds of up to 30 knots. All three vessels will be delivered in the first quarter of 2007 from Damen yards in the Far East. Jan De Nul Group will operate the vessels in the Dubai region.
By JACK GASTON





