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Vessel Build and Maintenance

Kotug Canada to build two high bollard pull methanol fuelled escort tugs

Elizabeth BakerBy Elizabeth BakerOctober 20, 20234 Mins Read
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Kotug Canada has selected Türkiye’s Sanmar Shipyards to build two RAsalvor 4400-DFM dual fuel methanol escort tugs to service the Trans Mountain Expansion Project (TMEP). Robert Allan is to design the vessels.

These tugs will escort tankers from the harbor limits of the Port of Vancouver to the open Pacific Ocean through the commercial shipping lanes of the Salish Sea. To provide this service, Kotug Canada has partnered with Sc’ianew First Nation from Beecher Bay, which is strategically located along the shipping route.

These two innovative tugs, to be named SD Aisemaht and SD Qwii-Aan’c Sarah in honor of the Sc’ianew First Nation, are scheduled to be the world’s first large purpose-built high bollard pull methanol fueled tugs when they enter service in 2025 and will reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and underwater radiated noise.

The RAsalvor 4400-DFM escort tugs will measure 44m in length and have over 115 metric tons of bollard pull. Both vessels will be equipped with a mechanical cross-link system between the azimuth thrusters to enable a single engine to drive both propellers. They will also be equipped with main engine-driven shaft generators to satisfy the vessel’s normal electrical needs. These features will enable the crews to optimize engine loading and significantly reduce fuel consumption and running hours of the main engines and gensets. Combined, these features will reduce the tugs’ underwater radiated noise, mitigating the effects of shipping on the Salish Sea’s Southern Resident Killer Whales.

Additionally, Kotug will have the hulls of both tugs coated with graphene paint to reduce biofouling and enhance hull smoothness, which reduces underwater radiated noise and makes the vessels more fuel efficient. The escort tugs are equipped with firefighting equipment meeting the requirements of the American Bureau of Shipping’s (ABS) FFV 1 notation and will have the largest spill response capabilities of any tugs on the British Columbia coast to mitigate the risk of marine spills to the Salish Sea and communities from laden tankers as well as other commercial marine traffic.

Onboard equipment will include heavy-duty electric winches fit fore and aft for reduced noise and to reduce the risk of a hydraulic oil spill into the environment. The forward escort system has been customized to suit the requirements of the local pilots for tankers using the TMEP. The aft towing system with a dual drum winch with 2 x 1,000m of steel wire is among the largest fitted to an escort tug and, combined with the vessel’s exceptional maneuverability, provides the capability to perform emergency towage of vessels along the route that may find themselves in distress.

Inside, the accommodation will include dedicated cabins and ensuites for all regular crew, all with natural light, and well in excess of regulatory standards. To facilitate training and additional response capability, extra berths will be provided for use by Western Canada Marine Response Corporation (WCMRC) spill response technicians. Particular attention has been paid to minimizing noise and vibration on board the vessels, with a crew comfort (habitability) class notation to be assigned by ABS along with Enviro and Sustain notations demonstrating the project’s reduced environmental impact.

Ard-Jan Kooren, president and CEO of Kotug International and executive director of Kotug Canada, said, “We are pleased to work again with Robert Allan and look forward to our long-awaited cooperation with Sanmar, which is one of the leading tugboat builders in the world. I am proud that we continue our active green policy to provide sustainable towage services by building and operating two powerful high bollard pull methanol fuelled escort tugs.”

Ali Gurun, chairman of Sanmar Shipyards, commented, “I am honoured to ink the contract of these unique first methanol-fuelled new-build tugboats in the world. We have been building over the years the new generation of cleaner and greener tugboats to meet the environmental targets in the maritime industry, this is another very important milestone.”

Michael Fitzpatrick, president and CEO of Robert Allan, said, “The RAsalvor 4400-DFM has been customized to meet the demanding operational and environmental requirements for this project.  As a company based in Vancouver where these vessels will be operating, we are keenly aware of the crucial role these escort tugs will play going forward.  We are gratified that Kotug Canada has chosen to utilize these world-leading tugs for such an important project in our own backyard.”

For more key naval project updates from the electric and hybrid marine technology industry, click here.

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