McDermott Order Deepwater S-Lay Vessel

Press Release
Thursday, December 27, 2012

McDermott International inks contract with Keppel Offshore & Marine for construction of a dynamically-positioned combination S-Lay vessel with a 2,000-ton crane.

The vessel, tentatively named Derrick Lay Vessel 2000 (“DLV2000”), will be constructed at Keppel Singmarine in Singapore and is expected to take approx 2.5 years to build.

“DLV2000 is expected to address a market demand we consider to be extremely robust for deepwater pipelines as well as our traditional markets,” said Stephen M. Johnson, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer. “A combination heavy lift and deepwater S-Lay pipelay vessel is an important asset for our expanding fleet, focusing on the subsea construction market.”

Developed by Keppel’s ship design arm, Marine Technology Development (MTD), DLV2000 is equipped to support advanced deepwater pipelay operations that will allow pipelines to be installed at depths of up to 10,000 feet. An economical vessel transit speed is expected to be 12 knots with a top speed of 14 knots. On completion, the vessel will be able to accommodate up to 400 personnel.

DLV2000 is the second new-build vessel currently under construction for the McDermott fleet. In August this year, McDermott signed a contract to build Lay Vessel 108, sister ship to the recently completed subsea construction vessel the Lay Vessel North Ocean 105, a vessel with a high-capacity tower for rigid and flexible pipelay and state-of-the-art marine construction equipment to support the growing rigid reel lay and flexible lay markets.
 

Categories: Offshore Shipbuilding

Related Stories

Eisenheim Takes the Helm at Shipbuilder Neptun Werft

174K LNG Vessel Christened; Board Approves New 8-Ship Contruction Plan

Aqua superPower, Tidal Transit Partner on Electric CTVs

Current News

Port Everglades Contributes $48.3b in Economic Impact, 300,000 Jobs for Florida

Report Details Four Ship Breakaways During Storm

Consortium to Advance e-Fuel Green Corridor Between Brazil and Belgium

Panama Canal Reduces Maximum Vessel Draft for Neopanamax Locks

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News