Wednesday, November 06, 2024
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Huntington Ingalls Industries

Huntington Ingalls Names New President for Newport News Shipbuilding

Published Nov 6, 2024 3:30 PM by The Maritime Executive

  Huntington Ingalls Industries has announced the retirement of longtime Newport News Shipbuilding president Jennifer Boykin, who has run the nation's premier nuclear-vessel shipyard since 2017. She will be replaced by Kari Wilkinson, the longtime head of HII's Ingalls Shipbuilding division, effective January 1. "I have asked Jennifer to stay on in an advisory capacity through March to support a seamless transition to Kari," HII CEO and President Chris Kastner said in a statement. "You will not find a more...

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Atina

Video: Salvors Raise Wreck of Burned Superyacht off Sardinia

Published Nov 6, 2024 3:29 PM by The Maritime Executive

  The sunken superyacht Atina has been raised from the bottom off Sardinia and will be removed for scrapping, according to Italy's coast guard.  On August 10, the 154-foot superyacht Atina caught fire off the coast of Olbia, a luxury destination on the northeastern shores of Sardinia. All 16 passengers and crew abandoned ship safely and made it to shore. Local media reported that the passengers were Turkish nationals, and may have included the vessel's suspected owner, Turkish delivery-company founder...

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Sovcomflot tanker

To Enforce Sanctions on Russian Energy, U.S. Needs the Global South

Published Nov 6, 2024 1:51 PM by The Strategist

  As Western policymakers seek to implement financial and trade sanctions on Russia, one thing is clear: engaging with the Global South is essential. Without fostering dialogue and building trust through consistent engagement, sanctions become less effective. As things stand, many Global South countries are just not complying. The reasons for non-compliance are complex. They include longstanding historic relationships, maintaining strategic autonomy, domestic challenges from the Covid-19 pandemic and climate change, and economic disruption from the Russia-Ukraine war. These priorities...

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A sealift ship offloads trucks with aid cargoes at a receiving barge off Gaza, May 2024 (USN)

U.S. Soldier Injured in Gaza Aid Pier Accident Has Died

Published Nov 5, 2024 11:29 PM by The Maritime Executive

  One of the soldiers who was injured in a mishap on the Gaza emergency sealift operation earlier this year has died of his wounds, the U.S. Army has confirmed.  Sgt. Quandarius Davon Stanley, 23, was one of three soldiers who were injured in an accident on May 23. The other two soldiers received minor injuries and returned to duty after a checkup. Stanley was badly injured, and he was taken to a hospital in Israel for treatment. In June, he...

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MORE STORIES BY CATEGORY

Offshore

Tropical Storm Rafael approaches Cuba, Nov. 5 (NOAA / RAMBB / CIRA)

Hurricane Forecast Prompts Gulf Offshore Operators to Shut in Production

Forecasts show Tropical Storm Rafael strengthening into a hurricane and taking a course across the Gulf of Mexico, and offshore producers are shutting in platforms and evacuating rigs in advance of high winds and waves.  As of Tuesday night, Rafael was located south of the Cayman Islands, heading northward with wind speeds of about 60 knots. The National Hurricane Center expects it to strengthen into a Category 1 hurricane overnight, bringing dangerous storm surge, high winds and heavy rain to...

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Shipbuilding

A maze of cranes at Rongsheng during the yard's heyday (Jiangsu Rongsheng Heavy Industries)

MSC Mega-Order Revives China's Rongsheng Shipyard, a Long-Defunct Giant

  MB Shipbroking has confirmed long-running rumors that Jiangsu Rongsheng Heavy Industries, a dormant mega-yard near Shanghai, will be revived after a decade of inactivity. A large-scale contract from number-one ocean carrier MSC appears set to bring the shipyard back to life. Boxship construction slots are all but spoken for through next year at the top East Asian shipyards, but MSC has an insatiable appetite for new tonnage. It has the world's largest boxship fleet, as well as the world's largest...

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Environment

floating hydrogen terminal

Plans Launched to Develop Floating Hydrogen Import Terminal in France

  As efforts continue to focus on the transition to new energy, Höegh Evi a leader in floating energy infrastructure announced plans for leveraging the experience with LGN to launch possibly one of Europe’s first hydrogen import terminals. Working with officials developing the new deep-water French Mediterranean port of La Nouvelle, a memorandum of understanding has been signed to study the development of the floating hydrogen import facility. “With its strategic location and well-established marine infrastructure, Port-La Nouvelle is ideally...

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Business

Port of Los Angeles

American Retailers: Tariff Hikes Would Raise Prices, Reduce Import Volume

  The tariffs that President-elect Donald Trump has proposed to enact on imports could raise retail costs on basics like apparel and furniture by up to $78 billion a year, enough to prompt some U.S. consumers to stop buying as much as they do today, according to the National Retail Federation. Current effective tariff rates on everyday items run in the range of 0-17 percent. Trump has proposed to increase these rates by 10-20 percent - plus at least 60...

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