News from media
Never mind the weather
Lloyd's List Ship Manager,
January 25, 2010
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BW Shipping has installed weather services on some of its
ships in a bid to cut operating costs.
In a tougher trading environment, ship operators are
examining more closely available options for reducing
costs. Recent advances in weather services offer
substantial potential savings in time and costs, plus the
benefit of reducing harmful emissions.
BW Fleet Management says that it is seeing direct savings by
using such weather services. Paul Jones, general manager for
fleet performance and development, said: “We had a recent
incident where a ship was able to avoid a delay due to the
accurate prediction of a tropical storm track, which saved
24 hours and 90 tonnes of bunkers.â€
At current prices this equates to about $45,000. The ship
altered its passage to sail east instead of west of Taiwan
based on the forecast weather information, avoiding a
cyclone. It can also help avoid significant losses due to
heavy weather damage to shipboard equipment, such as anchors
and accommodation ladders.
“In tough markets, when margins are under constant pressure,
we face strong demands to cut expenses and so we increase
our focus on those solutions that can help us cut
operational costs,†Capt Jones said. Bridge teams review
weather prognoses and discuss a course of action with BW
Fleet Management in Singapore.
“If the weather services can save each ship as little as a
quarter-tonne of bunkers per day, when multiplied across our
entire fleet of 90 ships over a full year, you will have
major savings,†said Capt Jones.
BW Shipping first installed weather services on a
number of gas carriers, oil tankers and bulk carriers in
2006. The initial investment was to provide additional
support to staff on board and help ships avoid trouble where
weather information is scarce.
In late 2008, BW Shipping changed the provider of its
weather services to Jeppesen Marine’s WeatherNAV and
OceanView. On BW Shipping’s HMC electronic chart systems,
the WeatherNAV solution provides weather overlays for the
bridge team’s immediate review. On other ships, masters used
OceanView to plan passages with weather data, in the chart
room.
Capt Jones said that although most weather service providers
used the same sources of basic information, the choice came
down to which could provide the best global support for
software, installation and training on a long-term basis. A
further advantage was that BW was also using Jeppesen for
electronic charts and it made sense to have everything in
the same format from the same supplier.
BW ran trials of the Jeppesen systems on board some of its
vessels in summer 2009. The ships documented comparisons
between the weather services’ predictions over a period, and
the ship’s observations, during a transit, covering wind
direction and force, sea heights, swell direction and force,
temperature,
barometric readings and precipitation. The observations and
predictions were consistent.
“The use of weather information has become part of the daily
planning routine, more of an overall improvement in voyage
performance. This may involve adjustments in course or speed
to avoid storms, adjustments in track to utilise currents or
avoid them, and more efficient use of crew time by better
planning
of work outside, avoiding poor weather,†Capt Jones said.
BWis assessing how to optimise its operations using weather
services. BW’s head of operations in Oslo, Arild Julson,
said: “With more transit data, we are more certain of the
external parameters of a voyage. Then we can begin to study,
understand and optimise the parameters that are internal to
our operations —
that is, we can assess how the engine is run, for example,
without fearing that our data is corrupted by differences in
weather conditions.â€
The operator is hoping that optimised voyage systems can
generate more savings. A true comparison would look at the
predicted fuel consumption
of an optimised transit, the actual fuel consumption of an
optimised transit and the expected fuel consumption of a
conventional transit. This involves significant data
collection and analysis.
“We are fostering a change in approach that looks at the
bigger picture of vessel management, whether that is voyage
routeing, power consumption, or loss/leakage reduction. The
area having most impact is main engine fuel and we believe
that real improvements in consumption will only be made if
the onboard
approach to voyage management is changed,†Capt Jones said.
“Over the years we have received a number of proposals that
suggest a reduction in fuel consumption, but realistically
the use of accurate weather information and amendments to
short-term voyage planning will have the best long-term
results.â€
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