Category: Shipping

CO 2 pollution: Rotterdam is the front runner

In European comparison: Hamburg in third place! Transport & Environment (T&E), a non-profit organisation that campaigns for clean transport, has published a ranking of European ports by carbon emissions. This shows that ports need to do more to make shipping cleaner. Rotterdam was categorised as Europe's port with the highest carbon dioxide emissions. The port of Rotterdam, Europe's busiest seaport, emits almost 14 million tonnes of CO2 every year, putting it on a par with Europe's fifth largest industrial polluter - the Weisweiler coal-fired power plant in Germany, according to a new T&E study assessing the carbon emissions of ports. Antwerp...

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UPDATE: Large container ship free again

The ship that ran aground on the night of 2 February while approaching the Weser estuary is free. Using a total of eight tugs, salvage teams on the North Sea have brought the grounded container freighter "Mumbai Maersk" back underway. This was announced by the Central Command for Maritime Emergencies in Cuxhaven after the salvage operation, according to dpa. According to the agency, the 400-metre-long ship was stuck in shallow water a good six kilometres north of the East Frisian island of Wangerooge....

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No ordinary application

"Bad Rappenau" leaves home port for the Black Sea On 7 February 2022 at 10 a.m., the minesweeper "Bad Rappenau" will leave its home port of Kiel. The boat, which is part of the 3rd Mine Countermeasures Squadron, will make the German contribution to NATO's Standing Mine Countermeasures Group 2 (SNMCMG 2) for the next five months and the crew of the "Bad Rappenau" will meet up with the rest of the NATO group in Haifa (Israel) under the command of Corvette Captain Jan Brodersen (37). They will then head for the Black Sea. The minesweeper will visit nine countries, eleven ports and take part in five international manoeuvres during its voyage.

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Congratulations good old Fehmarn!

Salvage tug "Fehmarn" put into service 55 years ago When the salvage tug "Fehmarn" with hull number A 1458 was put into service on 1 February 1967 by the Federal Ministry of Defence with commissioning order no. 281, the author of this birthday serenade, the current 1NSO of the "Fehmarn", had not even been born yet. In 1959, the German Armed Forces initiated an auxiliary shipbuilding programme for the German Navy, which was still under construction. The orders for the "Helgoland" as a type ship and the "Fehmarn" were placed with the Bremerhaven shipyard Schichau-Unterweser AG. The ships with diesel-electric propulsion were to be used as salvage tugs, icebreakers, for wreck searches, fire-fighting and towing...

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Ecuador fights back

Expansion of the Galapagos Islands Marine Protected Area As Alexandra Valencia (Reuters) reports, Ecuador on 14 January created a new marine protected area around its pristine Galapagos Islands, whose rich biodiversity inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, to extend protection for endangered migratory species. The expansion of the protected area by 60,000 square kilometres is the first step in a plan that Ecuador agreed with its immediate neighbours Colombia, Costa Rica and Panama at the UN climate summit in Glasgow last year to create a shared corridor through which species threatened by climate change and industrial fishing can migrate. The existing Galapagos Marine Protected Area, one of the largest...

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