54 Maritime Reporter & Engineering News • SEPTEMBER 2014
MARITIME SECURITY
and can be utilized for other ocean in-
dustries while in the development cycle.
As the security risk grows, so do the
capabilities of the offshore platforms.
From a mechanism to offl oad, inspect
and reload freight offshore from a single
ship, to a large trans-shipment port ser-
vicing many ships.
In its most advanced stage, the Portu-
nus trans-shipment port has distinct sec-
tions. The fi rst section serves interna-
tional shipping. This is where freight
is offl oaded and exports are loaded onto
large ocean-going carriers. Container-
ized freight is then moved by automated
guided vehicle to the next section. Bun-
kering, power, maintenance and repair
support is provided along with hospital-
ity services.
The second section is the security
and inspections section. A security
screening for human traffi cking, radio-
logical/nuclear material, chemical/bio-
logicalweapons and contraband, such
as explosives and drugs, is performed
here. Advanced imaging and detection
technologies, currently in development,
are paired with high-speed computa-
tional capabilities and data warehouses
(LLNL photo
:
Inset photo cour
tesy ZPMC)
These offshore ports can couple
the most effi cient way to move
goods internationally (ultra-large
containerships), and the most
effi cient way to move goods
domestically (short-sea shipping),
with an effi cient port that
can offl oad eight 18,000
TEU ships simultaneously
in 36 hours.
Pictured: Portunus showing
interface of triple-pick cranes and
automated guided vehicles and
automated stacks in the back-
ground.
Inset Photo: Triple-pick crane
moving 6 TEU.
MR #9 (50-57).indd 54 9/3/2014 10:52:31 AM
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