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Safety, Environment & Security |
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WEBSITES |
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Scandinavian Shipping Gazette
February 27, 2004
Editorial:
Confusion rules after Ballast Water Convention is adopted
IMO has adopted the Ballast Water Convention amid considerable misgivings
from leading international shipping organisations like
Intertanko, Intercargo, Bimco and The International Chamber of Shipping
(ICS).

Honestly! Divine guidance or
muddling through. The roots of our thoughts and feelings are not
here but in other worlds, and if the sense of oneness with those
other worlds grows weak or is destroyed in you, the heavenly growth
will die with you.
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Comment: Punitive action not the answer.
The European Union remains convinced that only punitive action will prevent
accidents at sea. Throw the captain or better still the
owner in jail at it will deter others from having accidents.

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Color Line ferry surgery at Fredericia shipyard.
Organ transplantation, organ donation, surgery, hospital
... These are words normally used in the medical field, but they
spring to the mind of the writer when relating this story of the
work carried out on two ferries at a Danish shipyard.
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KVOC
system proves its worth. Emission of VOCs (Volatile Organic
Compounds) is a serious environmental problem, and reducing these
emissions is a matter of urgency, not least in the North Sea. Statoil
admitted last year that they would not meet the Norwegian governments
mandatory target for 2003. |

A million passengers available. The 10-year
concession of the Saaremaa Shipping Company for organising ferry traffic
between Estonias larger islands and the mainland will end in September
2004. To date, the public procurement for a new concession agreement,
announced two years ago, has not ended yet.

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Queen Mary
2 breaks maritime records.
Desribed as the grandest and largest passenger liner ever built,
the Queen Mary 2 has completed successful sea trials,
been officially named by Queen Elizabeth II and is on schedule for
her official maiden voyage due to start from her home port of Southampton,
England, on 12 January.
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Competing for the maritime customer. Shipowners
want nourishing but inexpensive fare served up on their satellite dishes.
But if the quality is now reasonable, the cost remains high. What are
the chances of cheaper, faster food? Maritime communications is big business.
Last year its providers earned USD 1 billion. Ship owners may feel the
cold draught in their pocket books but although high bandwidth satellite
communications remain expensive, changes currently under way may be about
to lower the cost.

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Ship management software moves on.
Running a ship, safely, economically and environmentally has been
compared to running any plant on land. The logistical, maintenance
and operational challenges are essentially the same and the delivery
of cargo requires a similar level of customer reporting and relationship
management.
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Reverse sale of
satellite terminals from Danish Thrane & Thrane. Two years
after its introduction, it turns out that one product has had greater
appeal to a different group of clients than was first intended! This is
the situation with Danish manufacturer of satellite communications equipment
Thrane & Thrane, which launched the Capsat Fleet 77 two years ago,
a super-station packed with facilities.

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More feature articles:
• Swedish orders for Consultas
• HUGIN 1000 successfully tested
• How to make a mega-container ship from 500,000 pieces
• Tribon.com linking the shipbuilding industry together
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Also in this issue: News review, Market reports, Fleet news,
Finance and Insurance, Reefer market, LPG Market and Sunnhordland:
Patrol vessel to fjord liner.
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Next english issue, Shipbuilding and Ship Repair, is due 26 March, 2004.
Latest update 18-10-2006 8:49
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