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Artist's conception of the 209,000-dwt Alaska-Class tanker.
NASSCO Receives Exxon Contract
For Two Alaska-Class Tankers
National Steel and Shipbuilding
Company (NASSCO) of San Diego,
Calif., announced it has received a
contract for approximately $250
million from Exxon Shipping Com-
pany for construction of two
209,000-deadweight-ton Alaska-
Class Tankers.
The NASSCO-designed tankers
will be the largest ships yet built on
the West Coast. Each will be 987
feet in overall length, 166 feet in
beam, 88 feet in depth, and will have
a 641/2-foot draft in loaded condition.
Propulsion will be by slow-speed
diesel, capable of maintaining an
average speed of 16% knots.
Keel-layings will take place dur-
ing the third and fourth quarters of
1985, with deliveries scheduled for
the fourth quarter of 1986 and the
first quarter of 1987, respectively.
The contract is the first new con-
struction contract received by the
shipyard since 1980, according to
C.L. French, chairman and chief
executive officer of NASSCO, which
is a wholly owned subsidiary of
Morrison-Knudsen Company, Inc.
of Boise, Idaho. Repair and conver-
sion of existing ships have been the
yard's principal activities in recent
years.
"NASSCO is acutely aware of the
fact that the current demand for
new ships, both military and com-
mercial, is far less than is needed to
maintain the current shipbuilding
base," he said.
Mr. French said the contract was
awarded NASSCO after direct de-
sign and price competition with sev-
eral East Coast yards, and that
NASSCO has priced the ships using
estimates of manhours based upon
production techniques employed
extensively in foreign yards, partic-
ularly Japanese shipbuilding yards.
"We are confident that the em-
ployees of NASSCO will accept the
challenge of these more advanced
methods of shipbuilding and there-
fore maintain jobs at NASSCO,"
Mr. French said. "NASSCO has
bid very aggressively to obtain this
contract because our employees de-
serve the opportunity to prove they
can master the higher productivity
methods currently pursued in suc-
cessful foreign shipyards."
As transporters of Alaskan crude
oil, the tankers will operate between
Valdez, Alaska, and Panama where
the crude will subsequently be
transported to Gulf and East Coast
ports. The ships will also be capable
of delivering crude to West Coast
ports. They are designed with the
most modern equipment available
and will meet the latest safety and
environmental protection stan-
dards, including a protectively lo-
cated clean segregated ballast sys-
tem, inert gas system, safeguards to
prevent the pumping of oily waste
to the sea, sewage treatment system,
collision avoidance radar, and a
back-up steering system. The ships
will also meet the latest Safety-of-
Life-At-Sea regulations.
Since 1971, NASSCO has estab-
lished itself as the predominant
tanker design and construction yard
in the United States with its design,
construction and delivery of a total
of 33 tankers to date.
NASSCO's current work force to-
tals approximately 4,900, although a
decline is anticipated before the end
of 1984, extending well into 1985, as
converted maritime prepositioning
ships and converted fast logistic
support ships are delivered.
Production work on the Exxon
Shipping Company contract is ex-
pected to start late in the second
quarter of 1985, Mr. French said.
On average, the new contract is
expected to maintain employment
at NASSCO during the construction
cycle for about 1,100 oeople in addi-
tion to the yard's otner work. On
this basis, it is expected that em-
ployment will regain its present lev-
el in late 1985. Mr. French ex-
plained that for every job created at
NASSCO, about three to four addi-
tional jobs will be generated
throughout the economy. It is ex-
pected that many of these jobs will
be created in California and in par-
ticular in San Diego.
NASSCO's current backlog, in-
cluding the Exxon Shipping Compa-
ny contract, is approximately $820
million.
Ingram Barge/Potashnick
Form Fleeting Services
Company In Cairo Area
Morton B. Potashnick and In-
gram Barge Company of Nashville
have announced the formation of
Great Rivers Marine Services in the
Cairo, 111. area. The new firm will
provide fleeting and all related sup-
port services at Mile 950 on the low-
er Mississippi River, three miles
south of Cairo.
Mr. Potashnick said: "We will
of course be competitive with other
fleets in the area but more impor-
tantly, we will offer service and rate
packages tailored to the specific
needs of individual barge lines."
Ingram Barge president Peter J.
Kopcsak commented: "We have
joined with Mr. Potashnick to es-
tablish this commercial fleet on
20,000 feet of riverfront because no
barge line can operate efficiently in
today's environment without cost-
effective staging areas at locations
like Cairo."
For full details on Great Rivers
Marine Service,
Circle 64 on Reader Service Card
Navy Awards Paul V. Wright
$4. 7-Million Contract For
Mare Island Yard Facility
Paul V. Wright Incorporated of
Santa Rosa, Calif., has been
awarded a $4,681,000 fixed-price
contract for the construction of a
painting and blasting shop at the
Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Val-
lejo, Calif. The Naval Facilities En-
gineering Command, Washington,
D.C., is the contracting activity.
Tacoma Boat Division Gets
$210,000 Contract To Build
Propeller Hub Assembly
Tacoma Boatbuilding Company's
Northern Line Division has been
awarded a $210,000 contract by the
Naval Sea Systems Command for
the manufacture and testing of a 9-
foot-diameter propeller hub assem-
bly, according to a recent announce-
ment by B. James Lowe, presi-
dent and chief executive officer.
"Successful test results would
represent a major step in Tacoma
Boat's position in competition for a
number of Navy programs," said
Mr. Lowe. Among these is the con-
tract for the manufacture of all con-
trollable-pitch propellers for the
Navy's DDG-51 Arleigh Burke Class
guided missile destroyers.
The hub assembly will be of the
Escher Wyss trunnion type design.
Northern Line is the sole U.S. licen-
see for West Germany's Escher
Wyss propulsion systems. A world
leader in propeller systems for more
than 50 years, Escher Wyss has in
operation the world's highest-pow-
ered ship propeller, 46,000 shp, and
has developed the world's largest, 36
feet in diameter.
For free literature describing Ta-
coma's Northern Line Division full
line of propeller systems,
28 Circle 22 on Reader Service Card
Digital Wave Publishing