I like Ships too

If that's really you in your profile photo, then they'll recruit you for search and rescue/mouth to mouth for certain!
:rose:

Hey, look at this! I got hit on in Savage's ship thread.

I've finally arrived! My mom is going to be so proud.
 
I just noticed the Aiviq in the Beaufort for the first time this season. Normally, she hasn't been updating her position on Marinetraffic.com.
 


http://mi-cache.legacy.com/legacy/images/Cobrands/ADN/Photos/Christian_Claudene_1352168606_191233.jpg

Claudine's Obit.

"There will be a memorial hockey game at 4:30 p.m., Fri. Nov. 9th, at the Subway Arena on 0'Malley Rd. and a Celebration of Life at the Anchor Pub and Club, 7:00 p.m., Nov.9th at 712 W. 4th Ave.,Anchorage, Alaska"
 
Not a good day to be on deck.

The Nanuq is sitting in the lee of King Island right now.

NOAA says current and forecast weather in the area is:

...HEAVY FREEZING SPRAY WARNING IN EFFECT THROUGH EARLY WEDNESDAY
MORNING...
...STORM WARNING IN EFFECT FROM THIS MORNING THROUGH EARLY
WEDNESDAY MORNING...

.TODAY...E WINDS 40 KT INCREASING TO 50 KT. STRONGEST WINDS FROM
SAINT LAWRENCE ISLAND WEST. SEAS 18 FT. SNOW. HEAVY FREEZING
SPRAY.
.TONIGHT...NE WINDS 50 KT. STRONGEST WINDS FROM SAINT LAWRENCE
ISLAND WEST. SEAS 19 FT. SNOW. HEAVY FREEZING SPRAY.
.WED...NE WINDS 45 KT DIMINISHING TO 35 KT IN THE AFTERNOON.
SEAS 17 FT. HEAVY FREEZING SPRAY.
 
The Noble Discoverer is sitting in Dutch Harbor right now. With the storm coming up, I'd bet the Nanuq would rather be there than off King Island.
 
The Nanuq is still hiding behind King island. The Tor Viking is approaching Dutch Harbor.
 

The tanker business may be the world's 2nd worst business (as noted by Warren Buffett, the airline business is— hands down— the worst).


_______________

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-11-14/overseas-shipholding-group-files-for-bankruptcy.html



Overseas Shipholding Group Files for Bankruptcy
By Steven Church, Phil Milford and Tiffany Kary
November 14, 2012

Overseas Shipholding Group Inc., the largest U.S. tanker operator, filed for bankruptcy protection after global shipping rates fell and the company gave up trying to win a federal loan guarantee.

The New-York-based company today listed assets of $4.15 billion and debt of $2.67 billion in a Chapter 11 filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Delaware. The company owns or operates 111 vessels that transport oil, refined products and natural gas worldwide.

“We will use the Chapter 11 process to definitively resolve our financial issues,” Chief Executive Officer Morten Arntzen said in a statement. “An orderly restructuring in Chapter 11 will provide stability both to OSG and to the entire shipping industry.”

Overseas Shipholding in February withdrew an application for a $241.8 million loan guarantee to help pay for two tankers built at U.S. shipyards after Bloomberg News reported that OSG ships were calling at Iran’s largest oil terminal and U.S. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor asked the Transportation Department to reject the application.

Credit Markets
Since then, the company has been shut out of the credit markets, in part because it announced in an Oct. 22 regulatory report that investors could not rely its financial statements for the last three years, it said in court papers. It blamed the bankruptcy on the drop in shipping rates, a slowdown in demand for oil and increased competition.

In response to tightening U.S. sanctions, shipping companies including Overseas and Frontline Ltd. stopped loading cargo from Iran. Previous efforts to curb Iran’s oil income and stop it from developing nuclear weapons were hampered by the structure of the shipping industry, because vessels are often managed by companies outside the U.S. or European Union.

An EU embargo on Iranian oil agreed to Jan. 23 placed a ban on ship insurance. With about 95 percent of the tanker fleet insured under European law, fewer vessels can load in Iran.

Operating Cash
Overseas said it has more than enough cash for operations during the bankruptcy case and won’t need so-called debtor-in- possession financing. John Ray, CEO of Greylock Partners, will serve as chief reorganization officer, the company said.

Overseas Shipholding reported 13 straight quarters of net losses as tanker rates plunged as much as 96 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Weaker oil demand in the U.S. and Europe caused by the economic slowdown and warmer winters led to a reduction in ships crossing the Atlantic, where Overseas Shipholding’s fleet is concentrated, the company said in a report on its quarter ended June 30. In addition, an influx of carriers from Asia boosted competition, the company said.

The price to hire an international crude tanker dropped to $14,900 a day from $28,000, Overseas Vice President Robert Johnston said in a court affidavit filed today in the bankruptcy case.

Workers, Offices
Overseas Shipholding has about 3,600 employees, including 3,170 seafarers, and offices in cities including Athens, London, Singapore and Tampa, Florida, according to its website. It was formed in 1969 with the merger of five companies and went public with an initial offering in 1970, according to court records.

The company has the largest fleet of tankers operating under the federal Jones Act, which regulates shipping among U.S. ports. It has an exclusive permit for transferring oil from large ships to smaller vessels in Delaware Bay. It operates the only two U.S. flag shuttle tankers in the Gulf of Mexico.

Moody’s Investors Service reduced its rating on the company’s bonds in August, citing lower shipping rates, excess tanker capacity and questions about Overseas Shipholding’s raising money in time to meet loan covenants, even though many of its ships weren’t yet pledged as collateral.

Analysts’ Report
“Moody’s does not expect average annual tanker freight rates to meaningfully strengthen above their 2011 levels before well into 2013,” analysts led by Jonathan Root in New York wrote in an Aug. 2 report. Ship sales to raise money were unlikely because market values for oil tankers “remain in the doldrums,” Root wrote.

Overseas Shipholding warned investors in the Oct. 22 regulatory filing that they couldn’t rely on its financial statements for the three years leading to Dec. 31, 2011. The warning was prompted by a review of its accounting for taxes given its U.S. base and international operations.

Overseas Shipholding, which traded as high as $91.49 in 2007, fell 90 percent this year to close yesterday at $1.13. Investors include Oslo Asset Management ASA, Foundation Resource Management Inc., Vanguard Group Inc., Franklin Advisory Services LLC and Dimensional Fund Advisors LP, according to the bankruptcy petition.

Rate Decline
A decline in shipping rates since the 2008 financial crisis has helped to drive other ocean-transport companies into bankruptcy, including General Maritime Corp., Korea Line Corp., Britannia Bulk Plc, Armada (Singapore) Pte Ltd. and Transfield ER Cape.

Humpuss Sea Transport Pte Ltd., a Singapore-based unit of an Indonesian company, filed for liquidation in Singapore and in the U.S. this year.

Overseas Shipholding’s largest unsecured creditors listed in court papers include DNB Nor Bank of Houston, owed $1.49 billion under a revolving letter of credit; holders of $303 million in 8.125 percent debentures due in 2018, under trustee Bank of New York Mellon Corp.; and holders of $148 million in 7.5 percent senior notes due in 2024, under trustee Wilmington Trust Co.

Overseas Shipholding is represented in court by New York- based attorney James L. Bromley of Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP and Wilmington-based Derek C. Abbott of Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP.

The case is In re Overseas Shipholding Group Inc., 12-bk- 20000, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, District of Delaware (Wilmington).




http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-11-14/overseas-shipholding-group-files-for-bankruptcy.html
 
Anyone know the statistics of "oil spills" from shipping traffic at sea? Or could point me in that direction?

I had a discussion ages ago with a couple of pilots whom were husband and wife working for the Coast Guard. One of their jobs was to track oil spills back to the ships that caused them (many of them fishermen). And they mentioned 6-12 small spills on average with every flight. I can't remember the frequency of their flights. It just struck me as rather high.
 
The Nanuq is headed to Dutch through gale and heavy freezing spray. Damn, it's nice being on land right now.
 
The Nanuq is headed to Dutch through gale and heavy freezing spray. Damn, it's nice being on land right now.

Gale Warning
COASTAL WATERS FORECAST
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ANCHORAGE ALASKA
400 AM AKST THU NOV 15 2012

COASTAL WATERS FORECAST FOR SOUTHWEST ALASKA+BRISTOL BAY+THE
ALASKA PENINSULA WATERS AND THE ALEUTIAN ISLANDS UP TO 100 NM OUT.

WIND FORECASTS REFLECT THE PREDOMINANT SPEED AND DIRECTION
EXPECTED. SEA FORECASTS REPRESENT AN AVERAGE OF THE HIGHEST
ONE-THIRD OF THE COMBINED WIND WAVE AND SWELL HEIGHT.

PKZ170-160300-
EASTERN ALEUTIANS CAPE SARICHEF TO NIKOLSKI
400 AM AKST THU NOV 15 2012

...GALE WARNING TODAY...

.TODAY...NW WIND 35 KT. SEAS 13 FT.
.TONIGHT...N WIND 30 KT. SEAS 10 FT.
 

This baby has got a whole lotta sail area to displacement. Like a Baltimore Clipper, you better know what you're doing before you
take the helm of what is basically a ginormous sailing dinghy or you're going to find yourself in a world of hurt. Capsizing a Laser
is one thing, capsizing this baby would be something else entirely.

She flies.






http://www.marinetraffic.com/ais/default.aspx?level0=100


 
The Russian survey ship GEO ARCTIC is just pulling into Dutch Harbor and the Nanuq has pulled out of Dutch and is heading south.
 
Last edited:


One of the recurring nightmares that those who venture upon the sea in small sailboats have is the thought of being boarded by several scared, nervous, potentially trigger-happy, nineteen (19) year old Coasties equipped with automatic weapons.


I have no problem with Coasties. Pirates are another nightmare.
 


Many of us are still wrestling with the physics of how it is possible for a sail-powered vessel to sail faster than the true wind speed.



We just have to accept it. Expert windsurfers have been doing that for years.
 
Back
Top