Horizon Delivers Oil Recovery Barge in 9 Days

July 14, 2010

Photo courtesy Horizon Shipbuilding, Inc.
Photo courtesy Horizon Shipbuilding, Inc.

Build a barge from start to finish in nine days…impossible?  Not for Horizon’s supercrew.  “Necessity is the mother of invention”, said Ben Forrest, Horizon’s Project Manager.  “The Deepwater Horizon oil spill created that necessity.  These barges are needed and they’re needed now.  Our guys really stepped up and made it happen.  I’m proud to work with such competent and dedicated shipbuilders.”

Horizon’s craftsmen, under the leadership of Roger Oliver, Production Superintendent and Ty Gunter, Assistant Production Superintendent, met the challenge.  They worked through production issues and stay on schedule even though the barge design was new and had never been built before.  Working night and day, weekday and weekend, through the July 4th holiday, and in very hot and humid conditions, the crew was steadfast in its confidence to meet the daunting production deadline.  On July 10, 2010 the first oil recovery barge was completed as scheduled.

Horizon Shipbuilding, Inc. is under contract to deliver ten 45-ft by 12-ft by 7-ft barges in thirty days and are on schedule to meet or beat the delivery requirements, delivering a barge every two or three days.  The barges are double hulled and have a storage capacity of 10,000 gallons in four separate tanks.  They will be used for recovery of oil in coastal and inland areas.

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