Opinion – Page 13

  • A chemical aditive used to reduce particulate emissions, among other things, is being blamed for sea pollution
    News

    ‘Green’ additive or lethal pollutant?

    2013-02-11T16:39:00Z

    The UK media has recently run a number of stories about a ‘mystery’ marine pollutant that was supposedly responsible for the deaths of a large number of seabirds on the English south coast.

  • The SACM dual-fuel AGO-G engine
    News

    So who says dual fuel is the latest trend?

    2013-02-01T00:00:00Z

    Looking through ''The Motor Ship'' for February 1963, it came as something of a surprise to see a reference to a dual fuel marine engine – running on both diesel and liquefied petroleum gas.

  • Maersk Triple-E – larger ships equal lower cost per unit container (Maersk Line)
    News

    Shipbuilding in 2012

    2013-01-31T23:30:00Z

    Shipbuilding did not enjoy the best of years in 2012. Although on the surface things seem satisfactory, with many yards reporting that production is still high and order books are full, the realisation that far less healthy times are just around the corner.

  • Happy New Year
    News

    Best wishes for 2013 from The Motorship

    2012-12-27T13:11:00Z

    The team at The Motorship look forward to a happy and prosperous 2013, and send our good wishes to all subscribers and advertisers, and thank all our supporters and sponsors, online, in print and at our conferences, for their help in 2012.

  • LPG carrier ‘Nordfonn’ built at La Ciotat for Norwegian owner Bergesen
    News

    Engine pressures, operator problems, paints, the environment – and dual fuel

    2012-12-01T00:00:00Z

    In December 1962, ‘The Motor Ship’ was in contemplative mood. Writers and correspondents alike, had put their minds to thinking about developments in the industry, several of which have a familiar sound today.

  • The Kockums-MAN K12Z84/160, the first 12-cylinder large-bore engine
    News

    Woes for shipowners and shipbuilders

    2012-11-04T10:43:00Z

    The Motor Ship, January 1963, opened with a message from the UK Minister of Transport, the Rt Hon Ernest Marples. That reflects two facts: in those times this journal existed to promote the UK shipbuilding and marine engineering industry as well as the superiority of Diesel power over steam; and ...

  • A new introduction in November 1962 was this high speed diesel engine from Rolls-Royce, rated 600bhp at 1,500rpm
    News

    Fuel savings and European unity

    2012-11-01T00:00:00Z

    In 1962, fuel economy and general ship efficiency was rather less of an issue than it is today. Nonetheless, ship owners and designers wanting to save a bit of cash were looking at ways to cut fuel bills.

  • Cylinder tops and turbochargers of ‘Ancerville’s’ B&W main engines
    News

    Automation, large bores and short strokes

    2012-10-01T00:30:00Z

    One thing we often remark upon in this part of the magazine is the way that nothing seems to be new – ideas that are regarded as novel today are often closely related to those being considered 50 years or more ago.

  • USC subsidiary ‘Proletarian Zavod’, which may form a joint venture with Hakkinen of Finland
    News

    Russian government encourages domestic recovery

    2012-10-01T00:00:00Z

    The Russian government is considering creating conditions for the recovery of its marine engineering industry, in the form of support for domestic manufacturers of and attracting foreign investors to establish production in Russia, says Eugene Gerden.

  • SMM 2012 is expected to rival the 2010 event in terms of exhibition space and visitors (SMM; Michael Zapf)
    News

    SMM takes an optimistic stance in difficult times

    2012-09-01T00:30:00Z

    Henrik Segercrantz attended the SMM organisers’ traditional pre-event briefing, to find out how the biannual event, normally the largest in the shipbuilding calendar, was faring while shipping is seen as a contracting industry.

  • One of the Australian tugs that had more than doubled its bollard pull after a conversion from steam to Diesel power
    News

    Diesel continues to gain ground over steam

    2012-09-01T00:30:00Z

    It is interesting to note that, even as comparatively recently as 50 years ago, there was still a widely and strongly held opinion that Diesel engines were unsuitable for passenger ships, on account of greater noise and vibration than steam turbines.

  • New Zealand’s first train ferry, the ‘Aramoana’, featured diesel-electric propulsion
    News

    Japan takes the lead in shipbuilding

    2012-07-31T16:23:00Z

    The Motor Ship’s July and August 1962 issues – no such laziness as combined issues then – featured, in July, a focus on passenger shipping, followed by some pioneering concepts in August.

  • 12-cylinder Yokohama-MAN engine of 840mm bore, rated at 22,000bhp at 115rpm
    News

    Advanced propulsion from 1962

    2012-06-01T00:58:00Z

    Large bore engines continued to dominate the pages of The Motor Ship. In the June 1962 issue, engine designs from B&W, MAN (then separate companies of course), Sulzer, Fiat and Götaverken, all for tanker propulsion, were discussed.

  • ‘Allure of the Seas’ – a disaster to a ship of this capacity could cause serious problems when evacuation is needed
    News

    The bigger they are the harder they fall

    2012-05-31T23:33:00Z

    In the shipping industry, size matters, says Dag Pike: it was the VLCCs and the bulk carriers that started off the expansion in ship size and they only stopped when they reached the half-million tonne size.

  • Maersk Tankers says it will invest some $680million in fitting BWMS to its fleet
    News

    Danish shipowners question wisdom of BWMS

    2012-05-31T23:01:00Z

    Although the Danish Shipowners Association supports the IMO Ballast Water Convention, Denmark, like several other major shipowning states, has yet to ratify it, in the light of several serious concerns about practical aspects.

  • ‘Meteor’: one of four German research ships being replaced
    News

    Germans invest in four new research ships

    2012-05-22T22:05:00Z

    The German Government is to invest nearly €850 million over the next eight years in four new state-of-the-art research vessels, writes Tom Todd.

  • One of ‘Doric Ferry’s’ low-height Paxman main engines
    News

    Automation, longevity and early ro-ros

    2012-05-01T00:00:00Z

    The leading article in the May 1962 Motor Ship reminded us that, then, the USA was still lagging behind the rest of the world in adopting the Diesel engine in place of steam.

  • The Brotherhood turbo-generator system destined for the tanker ‘British Venture’
    News

    Tankers pioneer waste heat recovery

    2012-04-01T00:30:00Z

    The phrase ‘nothing is new’ seems to crop up regularly in this feature, where we look back through our archives to the copy of The Motor Ship dated exactly 50 years ago.

  • The final meeting of Hercules-B project partners, at the MAN Diesel House in Copenhagen
    News

    Productive outcome from Pan-European engine research project

    2012-04-01T00:00:00Z

    As the third phase (Hercules C) of the European engine research project gets the go-ahead, David Tinsley reports on the work undertaken so far.

  • 'Costa Concordia' will have undoubted ramifications for marine insurance
    News

    2012 looks bleak for insurance industry

    2012-03-31T23:30:00Z

    Prospects for shipping operations in 2012 are bleak, to say the least, and the outlook for marine insurers is also dismal, reports Denzil Stuart.