Van Oord christens new flexible fallpipe vessel at Wilhelmina dock
Van Oord’s new flexible fallpipe vessel, the Stornes, was christened on 24 September, the Company said Monday.
The event, which was attended by hundreds of guests and Van Oord employees, took place at the Wilhelmina dock in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The christening ceremony was performed by Mrs J. van Vonno, wife of former Supervisory Director W. van Vonno.
The Stornes is an ocean-going vessel that will be used mainly in the oil and gas industry for precision protection of pipelines and cables down to a depth of 2,000 m. It is the third and - with a loading capacity of 27,000 tonnes - also the largest flexible fallpipe vessel in the Van Oord fleet. The Stornes was built at the CIMC Raffles yard in Yantai, China, where it was launched on 20 August 2010.
The name of the new vessel, Stornes, is in keeping with the tradition of flexible fallpipe vessels in the Van Oord fleet (Tertnes, Nordnes). Nes is an ancient word for a peninsula in both Dutch and Norwegian. Stor is the Norwegian word for large. ‘Stornes' therefore means ‘large peninsula'. The construction of the Stornes is part of Van Oord's comprehensive investment programme for 2011-2015 period, amounting to almost EUR 1 billion.
Main features
Name
Stornes
Type
flexible fallpipe vessel
Length
175 m
Width
26 m
Total power installed
16,182 kW
Loading capacity
27,000 tonnes
Dutch-based independent family business Van Oord is now a leading international contractor specialising in dredging, marine engineering and offshore projects (oil, gas and wind).