HZS Starts Construction of ACL’s G4 Vessels

Business & Finance

HZS Starts Construction of ACL's CONRO Vessels

The official steel cutting ceremony took place last week in Shanghai for Atlantic Container Line’s five, G4 (Generation 4) RORO/Containerships, marking the start of actual construction.

Since signing a contract with ACL in July 2012 for the construction of these vessels, Hudong Zhonghua Shipbuilding (HZS) has been busy with the detailed design work and tank testing.

ACL’s President & CEO, Andrew J. Abbott and Henrik Karle, (Vice‐President of Marine Operations) participated in the event together with Grimaldi Group’s, Paolo Satariano (Grimaldi Corporate Technical Director) and Pierluigi Marmo (Grimaldi Group New Buildings Project Manager) at Hudong Zhonghua’s new ship construction facility on Chungxing Island near Shanghai.

“We are excited to celebrate this milestone for our first G4 CONRO (Container/Roll-on Roll-off). After five years of planning, this is the first step of the construction. ACL and our Parent Company, the Grimaldi Group of Naples, Italy, look forward to the progress in the upcoming months,” said Andrew J. Abbott. “We are most happy that construction of our ships will take place at Hudong Zhonghua’s newest shipyard, where they employ the latest technology.”

ACL has appointed Registro Italiano Navale (RINA Services S.p.A.) and the American Bureau of Shipping (ABS) to provide statutory classification services for the G4 ship construction which provides periodic survey activities, certification, testing and inspection during the vessel’s assembly. ABS will also be the site manager, overseeing construction activities and ensuring quality control on behalf of ACL.

ACL’s new G4 vessels will be the first of their type ever built. They will be bigger, faster, greener and more efficient than their predecessors. They will have a container capacity of 3800 TEUs plus 28,900 square meters of RORO space, with a car capacity of 1,307 vehicles. Speed will be increased by 10%, yet fuel consumption per TEU will be reduced by 50%. All five vessels will be delivered in 2015, with the first to be delivered at the end of January 2015.

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ACL, September 23, 2013