BV to class largest container ships built in China
Leading
international classification society Bureau Veritas is to class three
Ultra-Large Container Ships (ULCSs) to be built for China State Shipbuilding Corporation (CSSC) and chartered to French
operator CMA CGM. The ships are due for delivery in 2015.
l Bureau Veritas
is a world leader in conformity assessment and certification services. Created
in 1828, the Group has 59,000 employees in around 1,330 offices and
laboratories located in 140 countries. Bureau Veritas helps its clients to
improve their performance by offering services and innovative solutions in
order to ensure that their assets, products, infrastructure and processes meet
standards and regulations in terms of quality, health and safety, environmental
protection and social responsibility.
www.bureauveritas.com for corporate
information www.veristar.com for marine information
For more
information:
The 16,000 teu vessels will be
the largest container ships built in China to date. One will be built at the Shanghai
Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding (SWS) yard, and the other two at Shanghai Jiangnan
Changxing Heavy Industry, part of which came under the management of SWS this
year.
In recent years, Chinese
shipyards have secured orders for increasingly large box ships, and the three
new 16,000 teu ships are only a fraction smaller than the largest container
vessels being built today in Korea. The design was developed by the Marine
Design and Research Institute of China (MARIC) in co-operation with BV, which
performed the drawing approval and conducted a thorough structural examination.
The vessels will have an
overall length of 399 m, a beam of 54 m, and a draft of 16 m. Special
consideration has been given to hydroelastic design (whipping and springing) issues,
which are so important for this size of ship. A hydroelastic examination was
performed using BV’s HOMER software in order to take into account extreme
whipping loads due to slamming and additional fatigue damage due to springing, factoring
in the elastic structural response of the ship. This review provides a higher
level of safety compared to the rigid approach traditionally adopted to such
issues, and is mandatory under BV Rules for ULCSs of 300 m and above. On the
strength of this examination, BV’s WhiSp2 notation has been assigned to the
ships.
The vessels will be also granted BV’s VeriSTAR HULL
DFL 25-year notation, which certifies various structural details, including hatch
corners and coamings, for 25 years of fatigue life, following a spectral
fatigue analysis with a 3D finite element analysis model. The importance of
fatigue for large container ships, which generally lack torsional rigidity and
become more elastic with size, has been confirmed by real measurements on board
ULCSs classed by BV.
The 16,000 teu ships will be able to operate at a maximum
speed of over 23 knots with a single-screw propeller directly coupled to a 69
Megawatt, 2-stroke electronic engine. The vessels’ environmentally friendly
profile is attested to by BV’s class notations CLEANSHIP and FORS. The latter
incorporates special arrangements to ensure that the ship’s fuel oil tanks are
safely emptied in case of emergency, minimizing the risk of pollution. This is
an important safety aspect considering the size of the fuel oil tanks of ULCSs
Steel cutting for the new vessels is due to begin next
year and the ships are expected to be delivered in 2015.
Konstantinos
Chatzitolios
Manager
Containerships
Bureau
Veritas
+33
1 55 24 72 34
Labels: China, Chinese shipbuilding, classification, container ships, ultra large
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