Aker negotiations unsafe waters
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With the global recession crimping demand for petroleum products, offshore drilling, and new ship orders, Aker Philadelphia Shipyard is feeling the pinch. The nine-year-old Aker delivered its seventh product tanker in June and has orders for five more through early 2011.
But its only customer and buyer at the moment – American Shipping Co. -
said this month it had still not been able to arrange financing for two
of the five vessels.One bright spot: A Brazilian petroleum company, Petrobras, wants to
charter the two shuttle tankers and has signed a contract. Greg
Matecki, American Shipping’s chief financial officer, said he was
“comfortable” that his firm would eventually obtain financing, and
construction at the shipyard would not stop.Aker’s immediate concern is securing more orders for future ships – and keeping its 1,200 employees busy.
It takes Aker about 16 months to build a 10,000-ton tanker at a cost of $100 million.
Aker, which is the second-largest U.S. commercial shipbuilder behind
General Dynamics Nassco, of San Diego, has four ships in various stages
of production.Because of the time it takes to get components, such as engines, Aker
made financial commitments last year to build two additional tankers.
But it has no buyers yet.Company executives are spending a lot of time trying to convince
potential customers that despite the economy, now is a good time to buy.“It’s a double-edged sword,” said Jim Miller, Aker’s president and
chief executive officer. “On the one hand, the price of commodities,
such as steel and things we buy for these ships, has come down. We’ve
been able to lower our ship costs.”The negative is that, for the most part, the owners who want the
vessels built need to secure bank financing, and credit is tight, he
said.With the price of crude oil down, major oil companies and refineries
are in a holding pattern. “Money is not moving, and if the money is not
moving, ships aren’t going to get built,” Miller said.Aker builds ships under the U.S. Jones Act, an 89-year-old law intended
to protect national security and U.S. shipbuilding by allowing only
U.S.-made vessels to carry cargo between U.S. ports.Aker’s first four ships were cargo vessels designed to carry large
containers, and they were delivered to Matson Navigation Co. to
transport goods to and from California, Hawaii, Guam, and China. Those
ships were delivered between 2003 and 2006.The tankers under construction are part of a 12-ship deal, in which
Overseas Shipholding Group of New York leases the vessels from American
Shipping and charters them to U.S. petroleum companies.In 2000, Aker, a unit of Norway-based Aker ASA, took over the former
Kvaerner Philadelphia Shipyard. Norwegian entrepreneur Kjell Inge Rokke
quickly made investments in Philadelphia and closed an initial deal
with Matson. When Matson came back for a third and, later, a fourth
ship, the yard’s credibility grew.“The vast majority of larger commercial ships built in the U.S. in the
last five or 10 years have been coming out of Philadelphia,” said
Manuel “Manny” Stamatakis, chairman of the Philadelphia Shipyard
Development Corp.“Aker has made tremendous improvements since they built their first
ship,” he said. “The yard has state-of-the-art equipment, techniques,
and the workforce has really gotten good at building ships.”Aker’s immediate concern is to sell the two tankers, beyond the backlog
of five. “It is absolutely the bridge to the future,” Miller said.After that, he said, he would like to see Aker diversify, whether
building container vessels, windmill-installation barges for wind farms
in the ocean, or short-sea vessels where goods are shipped by truck or
rail in bulk to a U.S. port and then travel over water to another
destination.Longer term, Miller sees shipbuilding opportunities.
As a result of the oil-pollution act passed after the Exxon Valdez oil
spill, single-hull ships must be phased out by 2015 and replaced with
double-hull vessels that have an additional layer between the ship’s
oil tanks and the oceans.Aker estimates there are 15 older tankers at sea that must be replaced or scrapped to comply with the law.
In a move that could potentially benefit Aker, the Philadelphia
Regional Port Authority has authorized staff to apply for a federal
grant, on behalf of a Newark, Del., wind-turbine firm, Blue Water Wind
L.L.C.The so-called tiger grants from the U.S. Department of Transportation
could pay for 50 percent of the cost of specialty ships that erect
electricity-generating wind farms. Aker could build those ships.Another source of revenue for Aker could be building commercial vessels
for the military. The Department of Defense now charters some
foreign-made vessels, and members of Congress have questioned why the
government does not use more U.S.-made ships.“That would be another source of potential business for the yard,
although this yard has focused historically on commercial
shipbuilding,” Stamatakis said. “Military is a whole different ball
game.”Source: Philly
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On Sunday, September 27th, Aker Philadelphia Shipyard , a leading U.S. commercial shipyard, launched Ship 012. The eighth in a series of 12 product tankers to be completed by 2011, the 46,000 dwt vessel was floated off of its blocks and was transferred by tug from the Building Dock to the
On Sunday, September 27th, Aker Philadelphia Shipyard , a leading U.S. commercial shipyard, launched Ship 012. The eighth in a series of 12 product tankers to be completed by 2011, the 46,000 dwt vessel was floated off of its blocks and was transferred by tug from the Building Dock to the
An update of construction progress for the vessels currently being built at Aker Philadelphia Shipyard was recently made available.Click here to view the details Source: Aker Philadelphia
Aker Philadelphia Shipyard, a leading U.S. commercial shipyard, held a ceremonial keel laying on Monday for Ship 015, the 11th product tanker being built at the yard
Today, Aker Philadelphia Shipyard, a leading U.S.
The eighth Veteran Class MT-46 Product Tanker is the twelfth vessel built by the shipyard Aker Philadelphia Shipyard (Oslo: AKPS), a leading U.S. commercial shipyard, delivered its eighth Veteran Class MT-46 product tanker today. The 46,000 dwt vessel, named the Overseas Cascade, was delivered to a subsidiary of Overseas Shipholding Group
Aker Philadelphia Shipyard ASA (AKPS) continued to make progress on its tanker series for American Shipping Company ASA (AMSC) and delivered AKPS’ eleventh vessel on 11 June 2009. For the quarter ended 30 June 2009, the shipyard recorded operating revenues of USD 55.0 million and EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes
Overseas Shipholding Group, Inc., a market leader in providing energy transportation services, announced it has entered into a settlement agreement with American Shipping Company ASA (“AMSC”), Aker Philadelphia Shipyard ASA, and Aker Philadelphia Shipyard, Inc. (“APSI”), (collectively “Aker”) that settles all outstanding commercial disputes between OSG and Aker and provides
Two great teams – the 1,200-strong shipyard work force and the World Champion Philadelphia Phillies – were honored today at the keel-laying for the tenth tanker in the current build program at Aker Philadelphia Shipyard. APSI officials decided to recognize the Phillies along with its talented workforce because both teams symbolize
Could Aker Philadelphia Shipyard soon find itself building wind turbine installation vessels? The good news in the just released fourth quarter 2009 report from Aker Philadelphia is that it continues to get better and better at building tankers.
seeks to resolve liquidity issues so Aker Philadelphia can continue 12-ship newbuild program Read at OSG and American Shipping in settlement proposal
seeks to resolve liquidity issues so Aker Philadelphia can continue 12-ship newbuild program Read at OSG and American Shipping in settlement proposal
On 5 August 2009, Aker Philadelphia Shipyard ASA (AKPS) issued a press release disclosing, among other things, that it had become an active participant in the negotiations between its customer, American Shipping Company ASA (AMSC), and AMSC’s charterer, Overseas Ship holding Group, Inc. (OSG), to settle all of their commercial
The group hoping to turn Sydney, N.S., into a world-class shipping terminal is partnering with ports in Philadelphia and Delaware.
Tanker “Kirill Lavrov” (70 thousand deadweight tons) ordered for OJSC Sovkomflot is to be launched on December 18, 2009. This is second of two largest ever tankers constructed at “Admiralteisky Verf”(Admiralty Shipyard), the shipyard press service reports
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