Aker Philadelphia Shipyard has won contracts to build two
850-foot-long container ships for Matson Navigation Co. of Honolulu that will
carry cargo between the West Coast and Hawaii.
With other ship orders in the pipeline, the 1,100 employees
at the South Philadelphia yard will have enough work to keep busy for several
years.
"The winning of this order provides the shipyard
significant backlog and valuable visibility out to 2018," Aker shipyard
president and CEO Kristian Rokke said in announcing the $418 million contract
last week.
Aker, the nation's second-largest commercial shipyard after
General Dynamics Nassco, of San Diego, constructs oceangoing vessels in
accordance with the U.S. Jones Act, which requires U.S.-made and U.S.-operated
vessels to transport goods between U.S. ports.
The Matson ships will be completed in the third and fourth
quarters of 2018 and will be the largest Jones Act container ships ever built,
capable of moving 3,600 20-foot containers at speeds greater than 23 knots.
Matson and Aker have worked together before. The shipyard
built four container ships for Matson between 2003 and 2006.
"We did put out bids to other shipyards. Aker came in
with a great bid," said Matson spokesman Jeff Hull. "But we also are
really pleased with the ships that we have in service today."
The first ship will be named for the late Hawaii Sen. Daniel
K. Inouye, "a long-standing supporter of the U.S. maritime industry and
its role in supporting Hawaii's economy," Matson said.
The ships will be capable of moving 45-foot containers with
a mix of cargo, ranging from construction materials to refrigerated cargo such
as fruits and vegetables.
Matson, founded in 1882, is a leading U.S. carrier in the
Pacific, transporting goods to Hawaii, Guam, Micronesia, and some South Pacific
islands. It also operates a service between China and Southern California.
The new ships will be built to meet Hawaii's "future
freight demands with increased cargo capacity," said Matt Cox, Matson
president and CEO. The investment "underscores Matson's long-term
commitment to providing Hawaii with a strong, reliable lifeline to and from the
U.S. mainland."
Aker is currently constructing two 115,000-ton crude-oil
tankers for the ExxonMobil Corp. affiliate SeaRiver Maritime Inc. The ships
will be delivered next year.
Also, Aker announced in August an agreement to build four,
and potentially as many as eight, product tankers for Crowley Maritime Corp.
In 2011, Aker received $42 million from Pennsylvania
taxpayers to construct two tankers, for which Aker had ordered parts but had no
buyers. Without state money - and private construction financing that Aker
secured - the yard might have shut operations. Aker later sold the two ships it
built "on spec" to Crowley.
Source: Philly.com
Source: Philly.com
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