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Most of cargo operations are taking place between a ship and a land-based terminal. Nevertheless it sometime can be useful to transfer cargo from one ship to another in open sea and this is called a ship-to-ship operation. At that moment, one of them will act as the terminal where the other one will moor. The receiving ship is called the mother vessel.
Contents
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Why
- Lightening a vessel prior harbour entering or for re-floating
- Bunkering operation
- Earning time in a really tight schedule
Problem
It is not easy to close two moving objects smoothly. Therefore seafarers established a few procedures which will be used regarding the sizes and manoeuvrability’s of the vessels involved. We can consider three configurations
- Vessels making way, fast approach (1)
- Mother vessel stopped (2)
- Vessels making way, tactful approach (3)
The table below show the required manoeuvre regarding the operation for a few vessels
Table
Pilot Boat
Supply Vessel
Bunker Barge
Open-sea vessel
Pilot Boat
3
1
1
1
Supply Vessel
1
3
3
3
Bunker Barge
1
3
2
2
Open-sea Vessel
1
3
2
3
Vessels making way, fast approach
The small pilot boat considers this LNG as a stable reference
This manoeuvre is designed for a vessel with a high manoeuvrability which approaches such a big vessel that it can be considered as a reference on its own. At that moment the mother vessel can maintain her course and slightly decrease her speed to reduce her bow-wave and the small vessel will approaches to finally get on a parallel track.
Mother vessel stopped
When the manoeuvrability of the berthing vessel is not really high it is often less dangerous for her to approach a vessel stopped in the water. Like that there will be a protected side from the waves and the wind and there will also not be any bow wave. At that moment the vessel approaches on the quarter of the mother ship and get on a parallel heading at slow speed.
Vessels making way, tactful approach
It is of huge importance to maintain the heading of the “terminal” and this is not possible with stopped vessels. That’s why we will not consider a static reference system but one in translation because a ship needs some speed to maintain her heading. The biggest vessel will act has a terminal heading on a steady course at manoeuvring speed. Then the second ship will come closer in the same direction but a bit faster. When the vessels are navigating side to side, they can be moored. First of all, the spring lines will be tensioned to maintain the vessels at the same speed. Then the breast lines will keep the vessels as close as possible. It is also possible to add head and stern lines to prevent any longitudinal motion.
Vessels on a same course prior closing and exchanging lines
First step of the mooring operation, securing the fore spring
Passing the connecting hose prior cargo operation
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Ship-to-ship cargo transfer
- Ship to ship transfer guide (OCIMF)
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship-to-ship_cargo_transfer”
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