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Repair & Conversion Financier Calls for a New Approach on Standards Calls for a new Maritime Standards Board came from ship financier Paul Slater, speaking at the Maritime London event. Addressing the IMarEST and RINA debate on the single / double hull issue. Slater said that there is no standard established for the design, con- struction and operation of double-hulled tankers. "One cannot build a factory or an apartment building or a truck or even a container without meeting standards established by the government or local DERECKTOR SHIPYARDS the largest aluminum shipbuilder in the U.S. New York Florida Connecticut New Construction Service Repair & Refit tel. 1.800.691.2100 fax. 1.914.698.6596 www.derecktor.com Circle 239 on Reader Service Card WE CARRY OUT SERVICE ON-BOARD, AT POWER STATIONS AND AT OUR WORKSHOP OR YOURS Use our four decades of experience maintaining your engines, two-stroke as well as the four-stroke engines. Only the top quality Chris-Marine machines are used. Our service stations are located at our Swedish headquarters in Malmo with subsidaries in Singapore, USA and Croatia. For 2-stroke & 4-stroke engines Valve seat grinding/machining Valve spindle grinding Cylinder liner honing Sealing surfaces grinding/machining Portable lathes for various purposes Special machines for workshops CHRIS-MARINE the optimum solution Chris-Marine Head Office and Subsidiaries Sweden Chris-Marine AB Tel: +46 - 40 671 2600 Fax: +46 - 40 671 2699 info@chris-marine.com Norway Chris-Marine Norge A/S Tel: +47 -3279 8590 Fax: +47 - 3279 8509 steinar.olsgard@chris- marine.com Croatia Chris-Marine Adriatic d.o.o. Tel: +385-51 217 818 Fax:+385 -51 217 560 chris-marine.adriatic@ri.hinet.hr Singapore Chris-Marine (S) Pte. Ltd. Tel: +65 - 6268 8611 Fax: +65 - 6264 3932 chrism@chris-marine.com.sg USA Chris-Marine East Coast Inc. Tel: +1 - 904 354 6566 Fax:+1 -904 358 7862 us.eastcoast@chris-marine.com Circle 224 on Reader Service Card 26 authority in which they are to be built or operated", he said. "It is the absence of enforceable standards in the shipping industry that is the root cause of many of its problems." A new Maritime Standards Board would gather all the necessary informa- tion, which already exists within classi- fication societies, to establish new stan- dards which would then be presented to the IMO for adoption by maritime gov- ernments, he suggested. Class would then be appointed by the new Board to make sure that shipowners and ship- builders conformed to the standards dur- ing construction, and subsequently through the working life of a vessel. Slater warned the gathering that moving from single to double hulled tankers without establishing proper standards for new designs may well be increasing the problems of pollution by creating greater safety risks in the future. By establishing standards that would have the force of law. he said, the whole process of ship inspection becomes more straightforward. Class becomes an instrument of all maritime governments and applies a uniformity. Other speakers had warned of the problems of corrosion in double hull spaces. These inaccessible areas, dele- gates were told, were ideal breeding grounds for fast-track corrosion, partic- ularly aboard vessels where there was a large temperature difference between heated cargoes on board and sea water outside the hull. Such a temperature gra- dient would lead to substantial conden- sation, another corrosion catalyst. Early double hull tanker designs were at significant risk, it was agreed. "The early generation of post OPA 90 tankers are now entering the second half of their useful lives". Slater said, noting that many of them are now owned by spot market traders whose operating budgets are more limited than the major owners or oil companies and whose vessels therefore face higher risk from corrosion or structural failure. Slater, who often draws parallels between shipping and aviation, asked delegates if they would even consider flying in an airplane for which no prototype had been built and tested. Shipping should follow aviation's model with maritime nations setting the standards by which all ships would be measured and port state control would then be better able to enforce the stan- dards. "Shipyard guarantees could then be demanded for longer periods than are available at present and the substandard operators would be more clearly identi- fied," he said. Maritime Reporter & Engineering News Alaska Marine Highway System Ferry 240 feet - 250 passengers 30 vehicles - 35 knots New York Water Taxi NEW YORK WATER TAXI