California’s maritime industry warned of dire consequences from new emissions regulations the state enacted last year. Those predictions are already coming true. The San Francisco Bar Pilots have begun planning to replace their three 104-foot station boats due largely to challenges associated with retrofitting the vessels to meet the California Air Resources Board (CARB) regulations. Two of the station boats,…
Mariners felt better about their jobs during the last few months of 2022 as disruptions from Covid-19 continued to fall away. The Seafarers Happiness Index report was published in January by The Mission to Seafarers, which is based in London. The organization publishes the report four times each year to gauge sentiments among mariners working around the world. The overall…
Anchorage Launch Services of Portland, Ore., has taken delivery of a versatile 47-foot Triumph VII from Metal Shark. The welded aluminum vessel, outfitted for pilot transfers and other launch services, was built to Metal Shark’s 45 Defiant platform at the company’s Jeanerette, La., shipyard. Triumph VII is powered by two 705-hp Cummins QSM11 diesel engines paired to Hamilton HJ-364…
Authorities are investigating a fatal fall that occurred on a Maersk containership while it was moored at the Port of Los Angeles. The incident happened at about 1645 on Jan. 25 while the 1,202-foot Maersk Eindhoven was docked at Pier 400. The victim, who has not been identified, died at the scene after falling into a cargo hold, according to…
The Association of Maryland Pilots has ordered two new launches from its longtime partner at Gladding-Hearn Shipbuilding in Somerset, Mass. Deliveries are expected in summer 2024. The group is adding a fifth 52.6-foot Chesapeake- class vessel, while the other is its second 48.5-foot Baltimore-class launch. Both will be outfitted similarly to sister vessels built in 2021. The Chesapeake-class vessel…
The U.S. Coast Guard’s National Maritime Center (NMC) has begun accepting electronic or “e-sign” signatures on CG-719 series forms and all supporting documentation needed for merchant mariner credentials (MMC), medical certificates and course approvals. Mariners submitting these documents can now “e-sign” applications and supporting documentation using software-generated electronic signatures from software programs such as Microsoft Word and Adobe Acrobat. As…
A shipping company with offices in New York will pay a criminal fine of $250,000 and spend a year on probation after U.S. Coast Guard inspectors discovered one of its vessels used fuel with an excessive sulfur content. According to officials at the U.S. Department of Justice, between Jan. 3, 2017, and July 10, 2018, the M/T Ocean Princess, managed by Ionian…
The pilot fiddled with his cellphone even as the big ship missed the turn. The third officer sang out their compass course as a clue they were going wrong. Others on the bridge did likewise as the tension mounted. The pilot acknowledged their direction and continued work with his phone. Thus, the 1,095-foot containership Ever Forward went aground near Craighill…
The U.S. Department of Energy released a plan earlier this year aimed at sharply reducing emissions across the transportation system by 2050, including the maritime industry. The National Blueprint for Transportation Decarbonization calls for research into cleaner energy sources and exhaust treatment for vessels. It pledges to stay engaged with shipping companies, dock and port operators and energy providers, and…
The U.S. Coast Guard has embarked on a multiyear study aimed at creating harmony and order among the many interests vying for limited space along the increasingly busy coastline. The Pacific Coast Port Access Route Study (PARS), which began in 2021, intends to obviate potential navigational challenges before they become problems. Its authors looked at traffic patterns to understand…