Rickmers christens four containerships with a
combined capacity of 52,400 TEU during a ceremony at the HHI Ulsan
shipyard
Even for Hyundai Heavy Industries (HHI),
the world's largest shipyard group, it was a remarkable occasion. In a
quadruple naming ceremony at HHI's Ulsan shipyard on 2 July, Rickmers Group
christened four ultra-large container ships (ULCS) of 13,100 TEU each.
 MV "MAERSK EDINBURGH" (ex "PEARL RICKMERS") is the first
ULCS of Rickmers Group which will enter service with charterer Maersk. Photo:
Rickmers
Each of the four ships, Pearl
Rickmers, Ruby Rickmers, Aqua Rickmers and Coconee Rickmers, has a
service speed of 24.3 knots. They have been chartered longterm to Maersk Line
and will join Maersk's "E-class" as Maersk Edinburgh, Maersk Emden, Maersk
Eindhoven and Maersk Essen.
The ships will be delivered one by one
during July and August 2010, and phase in to Maersk's new joint service with
CMA CGM linking Asia and North Europe. As Maersk's AE8 service, it will deploy
ten ships of this size, each partner contributing five. The port rotation will
be:
Ningbo - Shanghai - Yantian - Tanjung
Pelepas - Port Kelang - Le Havre - Hamburg - Rotterdam - Zeebrugge - Port
Kelang - Singapore - Ningbo.
A further four sister ships are due for
delivery to the Rickmers Group in 2011, also for charter to Maersk Line. All
have been fixed for 10-year periods with further options.
Under the watchful eyes of Bertram R C
Rickmers, Chairman of Rickmers Holding, and his senior management team, each
ship was christened by its individual sponsor: Pearl Rickmers by Mrs
Nina Ruge; Ruby Rickmers by Mrs Cecilia Eckelmann-Battistello; Aqua
Rickmers by Mrs Vigga Schneider; and Coconee Rickmers by Mrs Marita
Seidt.
The naming ceremonies were attended by
more than 100 guests including Dr Wolfgang Reitzle, Chairman, Linde AG, spouse
of Nina Ruge, Mr Thomas Eckelmann, Main Shareholder, EuroKai/Eurogate, spouse
of Cecilia Eckelmann-Battistello, Mr Wolf Peter Schneider, Real Estate
Developer/Architect, spouse of Vigga Schneider and Mr Hans-Ulrich Seidt, German
Ambassador to South Korea, spouse of Marita Seidt.
Further present were amongst others Mr
Claes Devantier, Vice President, Maersk Broker, Mr Morten Engelstoft, Senior
Vice President & COO, Maersk Line, Mr BW Oh, President & CEO, Hyundai
Heavy Industries, Mr OH Kim, Executive Vice President Shipbuilding Division
& COO, Hyundai Heavy Industries, Mr Andreas Ostern, Vice President
Shipping, DNBNor and Mr Torsten Temp, CEO, HSH Nordbank.
Commenting on the day's events, Mr
Rickmers reflected the growing confidence in the container market:
"With volumes out of Asia again starting
to rise and rates holding, container lines' confidence is growing. Given this
scenario, the timing of the delivery of these Rickmers Group ships is looking
much better than it might have done six to twelve months ago."
"With two more sister ships coming in
January and February 2011, a seventh at the end of May and the eighth and final
ship in the series due for delivery in July 2011, we need the global economy to
continue this positive trend. We wish our charterers Maersk Line well in their
efforts to maintain a stable market. Too often we have seen container rates
tumble despite strong volumes. No one needs this to happen again, even the
shippers who provide the cargo."
Describing the vessels, Mr Rickmers
added:
"The eight vessels are ideally suited
for the current market, which is demanding the largest possible ships in order
to reduce the cost per container carried. Although built to operate at over 24
knots, the ships are equally capable of slow steaming. This is an important
requirement today and in the months and years to come.
"These ships will also be capable of
transiting the Panama Canal following completion of ongoing expansion work.
Larger locks and dredging will open up an important additional trade lane for
so-called New Panamax (NPX) container ships from Asia to the US East Coast."
Rickmers noted that were it possible to
load all 13,100TEU onto a single train, the train would be approximately 100km
long. Put another way, the locomotive would arrive in Kiel on the Baltic coast
of Germany before the last railcar had left the shipping company's home city of
Hamburg.
Technical details
All eight ships are being built by
Hyundai Heavy Industries' Ulsan shipyard. The principal dimensions are as
follows:
| Length (oa): |
366 m |
| Length (bp): |
350 m |
| Beam: |
48.2 m |
| Depth: |
29.85 m |
| Design draft:: |
14.5 m |
| Scantling draft: |
15.5 m |
| Deadweight: |
125,480 mt at 14.5m |
|
140,580 mt at 15.5m
|
|
|
Containers are carried 17-wide below deck
and 19-wide on the hatchcovers. The maximum capacity of each ship is 7,074TEU
on deck and 6,018TEU below deck, making 13,092TEU in total. Based on a
homogeneous container weight of 14 tonnes per TEU, the maximum capacity is
approximately 9,080TEU. Reefer plugs are available for 800 x 40ft containers.
Each ship is powered by a single Hyundai-Wärtsilä 12RT-flex96C main
engine weighing over 2,000 tonnes and developing 68,640 kW (MCR) at 102rpm and
61,776kW (NCR) at 98.5rpm. Five 2,700kw diesel generators are installed.
Although designed for a service speed of
24.3 knots, the flex-engines still achieve 21.5 knots at 60% of the engine's
normal output but can also slow steam as required under charterers' current
service patterns, generating substantial fuel savings. By having this
substantial speed reserve, the ships can increase speed when necessary to
maintain schedule integrity, an important factor in a service industry.
Management
The ships will be managed by Rickmers
Shipmanagement (Singapore) Pte Ltd (RSS), the Rickmers Group's shipmanagement
unit set up in Singapore to manage the fleets of shipping trust Rickmers
Maritime and Rickmers Group shipowner Polaris Shipmanagement Company as well as
third party vessels. Including the latest four 13,100TEU ships, RSS will be
managing a young - average age two years - fleet of 27 mainly Panamax container
vessels and Rickmers Group's two new PCTCs delivered earlier this year. With
the four 13,100TEU vessels, the total fleet of Rickmers Group counts 107
vessels, 78 of which are being managed by Rickmers Reederei in Hamburg.
The crews, with long-serving Rickmers'
Masters and Chief Engineers and experienced post-panamax officers in command,
are provided through first-class crew managers, among them Rickmers Group's own
Global Management Ltd. The masters to take command on delivery are Capt WW
Kucz, Capt J Priadka, Capt NC Suresh and Capt VP Fernandes. The senior deck
officers have been well prepared for their new challenge in big-ship simulator
courses at MTC Marine Training Center Hamburg GmbH, of which Rickmers-Reederei
is a major shareholder; the engineers have attended engine makers' flex-engine
courses in Switzerland. The programme has been complemented by first-hand
insight into the operation of ULCS by joining Maersk's own E-Class vessels for
a coastal voyage.
-ends-
Note to editors
Hamburg-based Rickmers Group offers
diversified activities in the fields of liner shipping, shipowning and
shipmanagement, investments and real estate as well as maritime related
services.
Information about the manifold
activities of Rickmers Group is available at
www.rickmers.com.
Please click here to see -
The Rickmers Group Fact sheet
Please click here to see -
Rickmers "Pearl" Class 13100TEU Container Vessel
Datasheet
Photos
Downloadable photographs to accompany the
press release are available at
http://www.dunelmpr.co.uk/RickmersGroup-PhotoGallery-NEW.html
and www.rickmers.com.
The caption reads:
The sponsors and guests of the naming
ceremonies in Ulsan on 2 July in front of the MV Pearl Rickmers (MV Maersk
Edinburgh). |