TurkishMaritimeNews
Home FAQ RSS Links Site Map Contact Friday, 24.May.2013, 13:06 (GMT+3)
All News
COLUMNISTS
   » CAHIT ISTIKBAL
   » NILUFER ORAL
   » STEVE PELECANOS
   » SULEYMAN SAVAS
WORLD SHIPPING
SHIPPING NEWS
   » TURKISH STRAITS
   » ENERGY
      » Pipelines
   » CONTAINER
   » PORTS
      » HELLENIC SHIPPING NEWS
   » CRUISE NEWS
   » PILOTAGE&TOWAGE
   » SAFETY&SECURITY
   » Environmental
   » Towage & Salvage
   » NAVY NEWS
   » Fishing
   » TANKERS
   » DRY BULK
SHIPBUILDING
ACCIDENTS
MARKETS
LOGISTICS
DEMOLITION
IMO&EU NEWS
PIRACY
TURKISH PRESS REVIEW
SEA SPORTS
NEWS FROM TURKEY
   » Anatolian Agency
   » Hurriyet Daily News
   » HDAILYNEWS
LLOYD'S LIST
INSIGHT/OPINION
SHIPBROKER REPORTS
Poll
What you expect from freight market in 2013?
Better than 2012.
Worse than 2012.
Continue recovering.
Steady up.
Rapid rise.
None


 
WORLD SHIPPING


Italy: Titan Salvage, Micoperi Win Costa Concordia Wreck Removal Tender

Italy: Titan Salvage, Micoperi Win Costa Concordia Wreck Removal Tender

Costa Crociere and the Costa Concordia Emergency Commissioner’s Office announced that the tender for the removal of the ship from Giglio Island has been awarded to Titan Salvage in partnership with the Italian firm Micoperi. The work will begin in early May subject to final approval from the Italian authorities and is expected to take about 12 months.
Wednesday, 25.Apr.2012, 13:15 (GMT+3)

Costa Crociere and the Costa Concordia Emergency Commissioner’s Office announced that the tender for the removal of the ship from Giglio Island has been awarded to Titan Salvage in partnership with the Italian firm Micoperi. The work will begin in early May subject to final approval from the Italian authorities and is expected to take about 12 months.

Titan Salvage is an American-owned specialist marine salvage and wreck removal company, part of the Crowley Group, and is a world leader in its field. Micoperi is a well-known Italian marine contractor with a long history as a specialist in underwater construction and engineering.

“We are very pleased to announce another important step toward salvaging the wreck from Giglio Island,” said Costa Crociere S.p.A. Chairman & CEO Pier Luigi Foschi. “As was the case with the removal of the fuel, we have sought to identify the best solution to safeguard the island and its marine environment and to protect its tourism. We would like also to thank Smit Salvage and Tito Neri for succeeding in defueling and caretaking operations.”

Throughout the salvage operation, environmental protection will have top priority. Once the main work is complete, the sea bottom will be cleaned and marine flora replanted. The plan also includes measures to safeguard the island of Giglio’s tourism and wider economy. Salvage workers’ presence will not have any significant impact on the availability of hotel accommodation on the island during the summer season. The main operating base will be located on the mainland at nearby Civitavecchia, where equipment and materials will be stored, thereby avoiding any impact on Giglio’s port activities.

Once floated, the wreck will be towed to an Italian port and dealt with in accordance with the requirements of the Italian authorities. The plan was selected by an evaluation team with specialist representatives from Costa Crociere, Carnival Corporation & plc, London Offshore Consultants, and the Standard P&I Club. All six tenders submitted by the March 3 deadline were of a very high standard, but the evaluation team decided that the Titan

Salvage/Micoperi proposal best fulfilled the main objectives set out in the tender specifications: removal of the wreck in one piece, minimal risk, minimal environmental impact, protection of Giglio’s economy and tourism industry, and maximum safety of the work.

The removal will be the final step of the salvage. Fuel removal was completed successfully 24 March. “Caretaking” operations, which include cleaning up the seabed and removing debris caused by the incident, will continue until Titan Salvage and Micoperi commence operations.,


Read: 5639 Times- Costa Concordia, -


Rating (Votes: 0)
Add your comment(Existing: 1)  Tell friend  Print

COMMENTS ( 1 Existing)
Simpler method rivals Titan's salvage method
Check out this blog for a much simpler and safer method than Titan's:

http://everyday-cynic.blogspot.com/2012/04/part-11-summary-of-concordia-re.html 
jgodsiff@telkomsa.net JonnoTuesday, 01.May.2012, 00:09

Related Articles:



Other Articles:
USA: Vigor Industrial to Build Second 144-Car Ferry for WSDOT (Wednesday,25.04.2012)
China: CIMC Raffles Delivers COSLPromoter Rig (Wednesday,25.04.2012)
Japan: Wing Maritime Service, Keihin Dock to Construct Environment-Friendly Tugboat (Wednesday,25.04.2012)
Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Establish Its Subsidiary in Peru (Wednesday,25.04.2012)
Fairmount Glacier Assists in Refloating of Bulk Carrier in Mozambique (Wednesday,25.04.2012)
Hapag-Lloyd signs deal for GAC to act as agent in Nigeria and Ghana (Wednesday,25.04.2012)
NOL raises US$320 million in third round of US$1.5 billion bond sale (Wednesday,25.04.2012)
Historic ship Queen Mary to host Princess Diana exhibit - Fox News (Wednesday,25.04.2012)
CMA CGM partners Maersk-Safmarine to offer Far East-South Africa loops (Wednesday,25.04.2012)
China Shipping expands Far East-north Europe offer with 9 weekly sailings (Wednesday,25.04.2012)





Events
May 2013
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  
 

News in Pictures


Big Yellow bird taking off as big blue EBBA MAERSK is coming into Port of Rotterdam


Hot News
Nexo Maersk polluted port of Valencia with oil
Hapag-Lloyd Launches New Levante Express Service
Hamburg Süd : “Best Green Service Provider”
Pocket guide focuses on safe carriage of solid bulk cargoes
Genscape Buys Vesseltracker.com
Maersk charters seventh Hyundai-built 6,673-TEUer from Technomar
PIL launches second Far East-Red Sea loop using seven containerships
Cosco to beef up transpacific CEN service with Evergreen, Wan Hai
UK: Transas Unveils New Version of ShipGuard
Boxes or WTO? Study shows boxes were biggest trade contributor

 
Archive Search