Advertisement

PATROL VESSEL: Irish Navy’s playwright

The Irish Naval Service’s newest ship, the €50 million LÉ Samuel Beckett (P61), was christened by Caroline Murphy, niece of the Nobel Prize-winning playwright, after whom the ship is named, at Dublin’s Liffey Quays, near the East Link Bridge, on 17 May.

The new offshore patrol vessel was also commissioned into the Naval Service, with Irish Prime Minister and Minister for Defence, Enda Kenny, present together with representatives from Babcock Marine Appledore shipyard, which built the vessel. Babcock is currently building LÉ James Joyce, as the second ship in a contract totalling €108 million, due to enter service in 2015. The 90m vessel has been designed by STX Marine to handle harsh Atlantic seas, and replaces the oldest unit of Ireland’s eight-strong naval fleet, the 1978-built LÉ Emer. JA

Ships Montly - January 2024

Stena Line set to return to normal timetable as Holyhead Port repairs near completion

Stena Line welcomed a statement from Holyhead Port on 8 May 2025 that, following the completion of necessary repairs, Terminal 3 (T3) at Holyhead...
Advertisement

Related articles

Stena Line set to return to normal timetable as Holyhead Port repairs near completion

Stena Line welcomed a statement from Holyhead Port on 8 May 2025 that, following the completion of necessary...

Damen Cape Town delivers third vessel to navy

Damen Shipyards Cape Town (DSCT) has delivered the third Multi-Mission Inshore Patrol Vessel (MMIPV), P1573, at Naval Base...

Finnmarken returns for Hurtigruten

On 16 May 2025 Hurtigruten’s Otto Sverdrop will revert to her former name, Finnmarken. Part car ferry/cargo ship and...

Incat Launches the World’s Largest Battery-Electric Ship

Hundreds of people gathered at the Incat shipyard in Hobart on 1 May 2025 to witness a milestone...