WINDHOEK – Damen Shipyards Group and Debmarine Namibia recently participated in a special steel-cutting ceremony to mark the beginning of the construction of a new offshore vessel.
At 177 metres long, the new vessel will be slightly larger than the current largest vessel in the Debmarine Namibia fleet, the MV Mafuta. Constructed from a Marin Teknikk design, the MT 6027 will be the most technologically advanced marine diamond recovery vessel in the world. On-board features include a dynamic positioning system (DP2) based on a seven-thruster propulsion system powered by six generators of 3230 KW each.
This is the first time Debmarine Namibia interacts with Damen as clients. The Mangalia shipyard in Romania has the largest capacity of all Damen’s yards, with a total of three graven drydocks up to 60 metres in width and 1.6 km total berthing space.
Damen sales director offshore, Ruud van der Stroom, was thrilled at the opportunity given Damen to apply its expertise at this scale.
“So far, Damen’s newbuild focus has mainly been on standardisation and in-house or own design vessels, along with various types of support and service vessels built for the offshore market,” he said. “However, the facilities in Mangalia allow us to respond positively to Debmarine Namibia’s newbuild enquiry: an engineered-to-order project with vessel dimensions beyond that built by Damen ever before.”
After an intensive and very constructive tender process, Damen was able to secure the contract with Debmarine Namibia and has since been working on design completion and on preparation of the Mangalia yard for the vessel’s construction. In terms of progress, Van der Stroom added, “This week we reached a first milestone: steel cutting. We are looking forward to the construction of this vessel, a challenging project I’m convinced Damen, with its extensive expertise and knowledgeable personnel, will successfully deliver on time.” Michael Curtis, head of the AMV3 vessel project for De Beers Marine South Africa, sees the new vessel order as a harbinger for potential future collaboration.
“We were already well aware of Damen’s reputation as a reliable, efficient shipbuilder,” says Curtis, “and we are pleased to contract Damen to build this vessel for us after successfully winning a global tender for the construction of the vessel. De Beers Marine South Africa will construct the mission equipment, comprising a subsea crawler and diamond recovery plant, in South Africa in parallel to the vessel construction. Once the vessel is delivered by Damen, it will be sailed to South Africa where the mission equipment will be integrated into the vessel by De Beers Marine South Africa. Given the parallel path and complexity of the project, it is critical to work with the best shipbuilders who have a reputation for performance and on-time delivery.” The vessel will take around two years to build. Damen Shipyards Mangalia will deliver the vessel platform in Mangalia and the vessel will sail on its own keel to Cape Town, South Africa. After the integration of the mission equipment in Cape Town, the vessel is expected to deliver first diamond production in the second quarter of 2022.