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Rickmers takes delivery of its Final Two 13,100TEU Ships

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

June 24, 2011

TAURO RICKMERS will be trading as MAERSK EVORA. She is one of the final  two 13,100 TEU container ships recently delivered by Hyundai Heavy Industries to Rickmers Group. Photo: Rickmers Group

TAURO RICKMERS will be trading as MAERSK EVORA. She is one of the final two 13,100 TEU container ships recently delivered by Hyundai Heavy Industries to Rickmers Group. Photo: Rickmers Group

Another naming ceremony for two 13,100TEU container vessels being built for the Rickmers Group took place on 31 May at the Ulsan shipyard of Hyundai Heavy Industries. TAURO RICKMERS and LIBRA RICKMERS are the final two ships in an eight-ship series being built for the Hamburg shipowner for longterm charter to Maersk Line. 
The two ships were christened by family friends of Rickmers Group Chairman Bertram Rickmers. Mrs Antoinette Zornig named TAURO RICKMERS while Mrs Elke Scharfe named LIBRA RICKMERS.
A Swiss citizen and a mother of seven children, Mrs Zornig is married to Professor Dr Carsten Zornig of the Israelite Hospital in Hamburg and is a supporter of both the board of members of the French School in Hamburg and the committee of Human Rights Watch. Mrs Scharfe was born in Hamburg and lives now with her husband Rolf Scharfe in Hamburg Blankenese. Here she can view passing traffic on the River Elbe, which will shortly include the ships that she and Mrs Zornig christened.
Mrs Scharfe established her own non-profit association Hamburger Kinderwünsche in 2005. This organisation cares for seriously ill children during their clinical treatment at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf.
Following the ceremony, TAURO RICKMERS was renamed MAERSK EVORA and sailed to Busan to commence loading for Europe on Maersk’s AE2 service. At the end of July, Hyundai is due to deliver LIBRA RICKMERS, which under the name MAERSK ESSEX should start loading in Busan on 30 July, also for Europe on the AE2 service.
The port rotation for the AE2 service is:
Busan – Hakata – Dalian – Xingang – Qingdao – Ningbo – Shanghai –Yantian – Tanjung Pelepas - Suez Canal Container Terminal – Valencia - Rotterdam – Bremerhaven – Hamburg - Antwerp – Felixstowe – Singapore – Busan.
With an overall length of 366m and a beam of 48m, Rickmers’ eight 13,100TEU ships are not quite the largest containerships being built today but have the flexibility of being able to transit the Panama Canal once the new locks are completed.

Technical details
All eight ships in the series have been built by Hyundai Heavy Industries’ Ulsan shipyard.
The principal dimensions are as follows:
Length (oa): 366m
Length (bp): 350m
Beam: 48.2m
Depth: 29.85m
Design draft: 14.5m
Scantling draft: 15.5m
Deadweight: 125,480mt at 14.5m
140,580mt at 15.5m
Containers are carried 17-wide below deck and 19-wide on the hatchcovers. The maximum capacity of each ship is 7,074TEU on deck and 6,018TEU below deck, making 13,100TEU in total. Based on a homogeneous container weight of 14 tonnes per TEU, the maximum capacity is approximately 9,080TEU. Reefer plugs are available for 800 x 40ft containers.
Each ship is powered by a single Hyundai-Wärtsilä 12RT-flex96C main engine weighing over 2,000 tonnes and developing 68,640 kW (MCR) at 102rpm and 61,776kW (NCR) at 98.5rpm. Five 2,700kw diesel generators are installed.
Although designed for a service speed of 24.33 knots, the flex-engines still achieve 21.5 knots at 60% of the engine’s normal output but can also slow steam as required under charterers’ current service patterns, generating substantial fuel savings. By having this substantial speed reserve, the ships can increase speed when necessary to maintain schedule integrity, an important factor in a service industry.

 

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