Meteo Consult and Amarcon Deliver Routing Software to Maersk Line

December 10, 2013

The Dutch weather routing software supplier Meteo Consult and Amarcon, have received an order from Maersk Line to equip a minimum of 110 Maersk Line container vessels with SPOS Seakeeping. The Seakeeping plug-in is a feature within Meteo Consults weather routing software SPOS. With this plug-in the user can define vessel loading conditions and motion threshold values based on the input of Amarcon’s OCTOPUS-Onboard. Amarcon, a fully owned subsidiary of ABB, provides monitoring and forecasting software solutions for performance and availability optimization of sea-going vessels, and is the leader in vessel motion prediction solutions.


In the SPOS Seakeeping chart, areas can be displayed where motions are expected to exceed the threshold values. In the route optimization, the motions are also calculated and the route optimisation will automatically avoid areas where maximum motions will be exceeded. With the Seakeeping plug-in the routing advice for a vessel is far more precise and tailored to the individual vessel, because of the fact that not only environmental conditions like wind, currents and swell are taken into account, but the effect that these changing conditions have on the overall seakeeping behaviour of the vessel.

Photo: Maersk
Photo: Maersk


In the coming months the software will be rolled out on a minimum of 110 vessels of the world wide operating cargo transporter Maersk Line. General Manager Leon Adegeest from Amarcon said, “We take great pride in delivering a response based routing advice together with our partner Meteo Consult to a company that is considered by Freight Forward Associates to be the best shipping company in the world.”

 

Related News

Cadeler Lines Up OW Turbine Installation Campaign in 2029 ABS Issues AiP for Pengrui and COSCO Gangway Design US, Canada, Finland Launch Effort to Build Icebreaking Ships Rush to Prevent Oil Spill from Grounded Ship off South African Coast CMA CGM Vessel Drops 44 Containers in Heavy Seas