Advertisement

Offshore wind ship breaks records for Middlesbrough

A new offshore wind vessel broke records for the region’s offshore wind industry when it sailed into Middlesbrough.

The 171m Leonardo da Vinci set a new record as the largest offshore wind vessel ever to pass under Middlesbrough’s famous Transporter Bridge when she completed her recent voyage to AV Dawson’s Port of Middlesbrough.

Built this year by Prysmian Group, leaders in the manufacturer and installation of subsea cable, Leonardo da Vinci is one of the most advanced cable-laying vessels in the world.

She has the highest cable carrying capacity in the market and a very large bollard pull to allow for ploughing in very challenging seabed conditions. It can also operate for extended periods in challenging weather and work to the deepest depths.

Peter Watson, Prysmian’s installation manager said: “The vessel allows us to offer an ever wider and more versatile range of installation services and strengthen our leadership position in this highly competitive sector.”

The state-of-the-art vessel’s first project was on the Viking Link project where she mobilised here at Port of Middlesbrough. The ship will be making regular visits to North East England as Prysmian operates its Northern European marine base from Port of Middlesbrough.

Mr Watson said: “Leonardo da Vinci will be a key enabler of a carbon-neutral world by 2050. We are delivering most of the biggest projects in the world and Leonardo da Vinci has a critical role to play in ensuring that our market share grows in the future.”

Gary Dawson, AV Dawson’s managing director said: “It was an amazing sight to watch Leonardo da Vinci coming into berth at Port of Middlesbrough.

“It’s all been very top secret so we’ve not been allowed to talk about it until today, but now we really do want to tell the world as it just illustrates how Teesside and the River Tees is evolving to embrace and lead the way in exciting new industries such as offshore wind.”

“Our relationship with Prysmian began with them having just a container of equipment on our site.

“In the last ten years their Teesside based operation has grown at an incredible rate and they now rent a number of large warehouses on site and use our port to manage all their Northern European marine operations.

“It’s very much a partnership and we’ve made significant investment to support Prysmian’s expansion, from building bespoke warehouses with roof access for cable spooling operations to investing in the quayside.

“We’ve been planning for Leonardo da Vinci’s arrival for the last two years. This has involved investing millions in dredging a deeper berth and dredging the channel to enable Leonardo da Vinci to reach the berth.

“This investment gives us deep-water berths with a depth of up to 9.5 metres plus the tides, which enables us to not only support Prysmian with their largest vessels but also to support other new customers too, in offshore wind and other sectors.”

Photo caption: Prysmian Group’s 171m Leonardo da Vinci makes her record-breaking visit to AV Dawson’s Port of Middlesbrough.

Ships Montly - January 2024

Wallenius Marine tests groundbreaking ship design for wind-powered PCTC

Wallenius Marine is conducting advanced wind tunnel tests aimed at realising the world’s first wind-powered PCTC (Pure Car and Truck Carrier) vessel. The tests...
Advertisement

Related articles

Wallenius Marine tests groundbreaking ship design for wind-powered PCTC

Wallenius Marine is conducting advanced wind tunnel tests aimed at realising the world’s first wind-powered PCTC (Pure Car...

Ships Monthly January 2025 issue out now

The January 2025 issue of Ships Monthly is out now, and is packed with all the usual news...

Ice breaker Storis set for US Arctic role

A week after the ice breaker Aiviq arrived at Tampa Ship LLC in Florida, the vessel had been...

Giant FPSO arrives in Brazilian waters

Towed by the oceangoing tugs BOKA Defender, BOKA Expedition and BOKA Sherpa, the FPSO Almirante Tamandaré arrived in...