Concordia Maritime Extends Charters for Tanker Duo

December 31, 2014

 

Concordia Maritime has just renewed its contract with a major oil and gas company for a consecutive voyage charter arrangement for the P-MAX tankers Stena Provence and Stena Polaris. The agreement will run until the summer of 2015.

“This is a testament to the fact that our P-MAX tankers make a major difference when properly utilized. We are very pleased to be able to extend this charter, which, alongside our business partner, we have long and successfully cultivated in this region of the world,” says Kim Ullman, CEO of Concordia Maritime.

“We have been working hard throughout the year to implement a more assertive charter strategy to maximize the strong earnings capacity of the vessels, which is also the case within the framework of this agreement,” adds Kim Ullman.

The P-MAX tankers are particularly well suited for this trade with their extremely shallow draft design. Their LOA is 183 meters, the same as conventional MR tankers, but they have a beam of 40 meters enabling them to lift approx. 50,000 mt on 11 meters. They also have a fully redundant propulsion system with two separate engines, steering machinery, rudders and propellers.

Technical data for Stena Provence and Stena Polaris:

Length: 183 m, beam 40 m, draft (design) 11.3 m, deadweight: 65,200 tons
 

Logistics News

HD Hyundai and Maersk Cooperate on Decarbonization and Logistics

HD Hyundai and Maersk Cooperate on Decarbonization and Logistics

Ambrey: RSF Launched Drone Attack on Port Sudan's Container Terminal

Ambrey: RSF Launched Drone Attack on Port Sudan's Container Terminal

Israel Bombs Yemen's Hodeidah Port

Israel Bombs Yemen's Hodeidah Port

SAAM Terminals Holds Fourth Port Gathering to Reflect on Industry Challenges

SAAM Terminals Holds Fourth Port Gathering to Reflect on Industry Challenges

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

South Korea's NOFI purchased about 66,000 T of corn in a private deal, traders claim
CANADA-CRUDE-Discount on Western Canada Select heavy crude tightens further, settles below $9
EU plan to phase-out Russian gas by 2027