VIDEO: Damen's 'Ground-breaking' Fast Crew Supplier Completes Sea Trials
Dutch shipbuilder Damen said Thursday that the first of Damen's ground-breaking Fast Crew Supplier (FCS) 7011 class has completed its sea trials coast of Turkey and is now set to move to the Netherlands.
"The offshore energy market and prospective customers will soon be able to experience the comfort and capabilities of the 74-meter, 40 knots, 122-passenger, crew change vessel," the company said.
Damen said that the FCS 7011, in combination with the latest Ampelmann walk-to-work system, "represents the very latest in marine access thinking, having been developed in consultation with the offshore energy industry and leading maritime research institutes."
"Its goal is to meet the challenges presented by the unpredictability of the price of oil and increasingly competitive renewable energy. As a cost-effective crew transportation solution featuring the highest levels of both comfort and safety, it offers a viable alternative to helicopter transport and has already gained substantial interest from clients in the southern North Sea, the Gulf of Mexico, Brazil, and West Africa," Damen said.
Damen explained that the business case is based on the vessel's ability to transfer much larger numbers of personnel for longer distances at higher speeds.
"This opens the door to moving away from day-rate structures towards a pay per journey model and, potentially, vessel sharing, whereby multiple offshore installations can be served in a single round trip, thereby delivering substantial savings in both time and operational costs," Damen said.
With journey times of up to 12 hours, comfort and safety are key, Damen says.
"To achieve this the design incorporates the Damen Sea Axe bow, the positioning of the accommodation just aft of amidships, and interceptors fitted within the vessel's stern, all to minimize sensations of motion as it moves through the sea. The FCS 7011 also features a range of motion-compensating technologies to optimize the safety of crew transfers," the Dutch shipbuilder said.
The technologies that will keep the vessel stable in all conditions include a Kongsberg DP system, a custom-made Ampelmann gangway, and a VEEM gyrostabilizer, operating alongside the MTU main engines, Hamilton waterjets, Danfoss shaft generators, Reintjes gearboxes, and Veth bow thrusters.
"The result is a tightly integrated advanced control system capable of delivering and receiving personnel safely in a wide range of sea states," Damen said.
On arrival in the Netherlands, the Ampelmann gangway system will be installed, making the FCS 7011 ready for fully integrated, proof of concept trials in the North Sea, Damen said.