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CTR Looks To Build An Instant Floot, Calling For 59 Ships In Four Yoars CTR Group of Woodcliff Lake, N.J., has stirred considerable excitement in the maritime world with its recent tender for a fleet of 59 ships to help it lay and main- tain 328,980 km of optic fiber cable. The company initially launched its project — dubbed Project OXYGEN — to build a Global Super-Internet last July. The Request For Proposal (RFP) was sent to 22 shipyards in Asia, Europe, and North America, calls for a fleet of 59 ships of various sizes to be delivered between 1999 and 2003. "This is one of the largest numbers of vessels ever contracted for at any one time in the commercial shipping industry," said Larry Cahill, vice president, Cableship Finance at CTR Group, Avondale Restructures For New Century From left to right: R. Dean Church; Ronald McAlear; and Edmund Mortimer. Avondale Industries has reorga- nized into six strategic units in order to catch up on a $3.7 billion backlog of work (including options). Avondale introduced six new vice presidents that will head each of the new units. Thomas Doussan was named corporate vice presi- dent and COO. He will be respon- sible for the engineering, produc- tion, material and estimating departments. Thomas Kitchen was named corporate vice presi- dent and CFO. His duties will include all corporate finance departments, business practices and integrated product and data environment (IPDE). Edmund Mortimer was named vice presi- dent of Government Programs. Kenneth DuPont was named cor- porate vice president of Commercial and Offshore Programs. He is responsible for the Industrial-Commercial group, commercial boat construction, the Steel Sales Division and the UNO- Avondale Maritime Center of Excellence. R. Dean Church was appointed corporate vice president and Chief Administrative officer. Ronald J. McAlear was named corporate vice president of Advanced Programs and Marketing. He will be responsible for advanced programs, marketing, proposal management and public relations. March, 1998 81 Ltd., the company building OXY- GEN Network. CTR has planned a bidders' con- ference for the potential suppliers on March 16 in Miami, where it will instruct them on bid submis- sion procedures as well as the time line for completing negotiations, and give them a detailed briefing on the OXYGEN Network. The bids are due March 27. On April 25, CTR will announce a short list of bidders and begin commercial negotiations with them, with the goal of signing a shipbuilding con- tract on June 1. CTR expects the fleet to be based in 59 locations throughout the world under Project OZONE, the global mainte- nance system for the OXYGEN Network. It reasons that spread- ing the armada will make possible an average response time of three days for a ship to reach a repair site. The RFP calls for the con- struction of several sizes of ships, which vary according to the water depth they are to operate in and the equipment they will carry. When the smoke clears, the CTR fleet could look like this: nine 4,000-dwt ships; 38 2,000-3,000- dwt ships; and 12 1,000-dwt ships. . • . • mm- SINCE THE BEGINNING OF TIME MAN HAS BATTLED THE POWER OF THE SEA. Man has always sought protection against the brutal impact of waves, the pull of , currents. Within them rages a devastating energy that batters ships, fenders, buoys'. \ and piling. Whether by the force of waves or the silent attrition of borers and common, the sea eventually destroys everything it touches. Everything except the marine products of Seaward International. Seaward is the leader in developing and manufacturing the technology and materials that provide unparalleled protection against the sea. Unlike wood or metal products, our buoys, fenders, floats, piles and timbers resist the power of the sat because of their unique plastic, foam and elastomer consmu lion. Our wide range of products have beau tested and proven over23years, in waters from Los Angeles to Singapore. So while Seaward can't diminish the power of the sea, our products can be the protection that stancMktween it and you. SEA WAI INTERNATK PROTECTING i 3470 MaMhsbiff^ 1 'ikr. IQIfrMt foshook VA IM&B >m IW) M>7-5NJ hiv. (>HV «iT-7«M7»wtj Visit Seaward at booths #28 & #29 at the Ports '98 Conference. Also visit Seaward at booth #2241 at the OTC. Circle 276 on Reader Service Card