Titan to Improve Port-au-Prince Navigation

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

A Titan Salvage team is working in Haiti to remove navigational hazards, including the collapsed Washington gantry crane, in Port-au-Prince for the U.S. Transportation Command (USTRANSCOM), in an effort to increase the cargo throughput in the heavily damaged port. 
 
Titan’s team, led by Salvage Master Roy Dodgen and Project Manager Leo McDonough, is using Resolve Marine Services' 142-ft crane barge RMG300 to help clear debris and other navigational hazards. Additionally, Titan has hired Associated Marine Salvage's 150-ft crane barge MB1215 to support the marine construction needed to position two, 400-ft by 100-ft Crowley deck barges in the port. The barges will be used as floating piers for discharging cargo.
 
In January, the Titan team conducted an extensive survey of the port to map navigable routes into the port and determine what underwater obstacles needed to be removed to allow cargo to enter the country directly via vessel. During that survey, Titan determined that a cargo lightering operation was possible in Port-au-Prince whereby a Crowley containership could transfer full container loads to a smaller vessel offshore and deliver that cargo over a beach.
 
Since then, Crowley has delivered approximately 935 containers of relief cargo using this lightering method. 
 
(www.titansalvage.com)

Categories: People & Company News

Related Stories

NYK Bulkship Partners Sets Sail

Windward: Strait of Hormuz Throughput is Increasing

Built on the Rivers: Aimee Andres and the Expanding Role of America’s Inland Ports

Current News

New Wildlife Trafficking Compendium Released for Singapore

Australia’s Port of Newcastle Sets Diversified Trade Record

Bahrain Circulates Revised UN Hormuz Draft

Shale Oil Components Detected in Marine Fuels, says VPS

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News