Ineos Adds New Gas Barges for Rhine Shipping

April 29, 2020

UK-based chemicals company Ineos said Wednesday it has accepted delivery of three of four new gas barges that will be used to transport butane gas from the ARA region (Antwerp, Rotterdam, Amsterdam) to the Ineos ethylene cracker facility at Koln, Germany. In addition, they will provide INEOS Trading & Shipping with options to effectively trade butane in Europe.

The new gas barges will become the largest operating on the River Rhine and are the first to be fully built to the new ADN gas barge 2019 standard.

(Photo: Ineos)
(Photo: Ineos)

Hugh Carmichael, Feedstocks Trading Director of INEOS Trading & Shipping said, “This supersized delivery is the result of a four-year project to design and build this new class of barge. They have three times the cargo capacity of typical gas barges.”

The build project was managed by Imperial Gas Barging, who will also operate the barges on behalf of Ineos. The construction of the barges was split between two Dutch companies: Teamco Shipyard in Heusden, who subcontracted Hull construction to Rensen-Driessen Shipbuilding B.V of the Netherlands and then had work completed by the partner Stocznia Sp. Zo.o. Shipyard; and Veka Shipbuilding Group in Werkendam, who completed all of the construction in Holland.

The gas tanks were manufactured by Barlage GMbH. The barges all use a veth pod-drive system, rather than the more usual shaft propulsion.

The barges will be named Aloo, Brinjal and Onion, taking their names from the Indian Bhaji theme. 

The Teamco-built Aloo and Brinjal are 110 by 15 meters with six cargo tanks holding a combined 4,446 cubic meters. Veka-built Onion is bigger at 110 by 17.5 meters with six tanks holding 5,538 cubic meters. A fourth sister ship will be delivered later this year.

Related News

Collapsed Baltimore Bridge Blasted into Pieces NASSCO Christens Fifth Ship in US Navy's ESB Program Salvors Set to Blast Collapsed Baltimore to Pieces Stena Line Announces Management Changes US House Panel to Hold Hearing on Baltimore Bridge Collapse