Arctic shipping - a study on feasibility and future impact on warehousing/shipping routes/shipbuilding

Sailing through the Arctic Ocean via the Northern Sea Route (NSR) gives a saving of around 40% on the sailing distance from East Asia (Yokohama) to Northern Europe (Hamburg) as compared to the current Suez Canal route. However, this 40% reduction in distance does not correspond to a 40% of cost savi...

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Main Author: Wong, Suet Peng.
Other Authors: Lum Kit Meng, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/45451
id ftnanyangtu:oai:dr.ntu.edu.sg:10356/45451
record_format openpolar
spelling ftnanyangtu:oai:dr.ntu.edu.sg:10356/45451 2023-05-15T14:48:10+02:00 Arctic shipping - a study on feasibility and future impact on warehousing/shipping routes/shipbuilding Wong, Suet Peng. Lum Kit Meng School of Civil and Environmental Engineering 2011 76 p. application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10356/45451 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10356/45451 Nanyang Technological University DRNTU::Engineering::Maritime studies Final Year Project (FYP) 2011 ftnanyangtu 2023-03-10T01:23:26Z Sailing through the Arctic Ocean via the Northern Sea Route (NSR) gives a saving of around 40% on the sailing distance from East Asia (Yokohama) to Northern Europe (Hamburg) as compared to the current Suez Canal route. However, this 40% reduction in distance does not correspond to a 40% of cost saving due to many factors, such as higher construction cost for ice-classed vessels, non-regularity of schedule due to the ever-changing ice conditions, slower sailing speed, navigation difficulties, higher risk, hefty icebreaking service fees and etc.In this research study, NSR’s economic feasibility is examined using voyage simulation where 4,300 TEU container ships (normal open water, normal ice-classed and Aker Arctic double-acting ship) are employed, each make year round service between Yokohama and Hamburg. The annual total cost per TEU shipped by normal open water ship via Suez Canal is compared to the annual total cost per TEU shipped incurred from the ice-classed ships (normal ice-classed and Aker Arctic double-acting ship), taking NSR during the navigable months and Suez Canal for the rest of the year. To make this study flexible, length of NSR navigation season has been divided into three options (3/6/9 months per year). Bachelor of Science (Maritime Studies) Other/Unknown Material Arctic Arctic Ocean Northern Sea Route DR-NTU (Digital Repository at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore) Arctic Arctic Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection DR-NTU (Digital Repository at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)
op_collection_id ftnanyangtu
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Maritime studies
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Maritime studies
Wong, Suet Peng.
Arctic shipping - a study on feasibility and future impact on warehousing/shipping routes/shipbuilding
topic_facet DRNTU::Engineering::Maritime studies
description Sailing through the Arctic Ocean via the Northern Sea Route (NSR) gives a saving of around 40% on the sailing distance from East Asia (Yokohama) to Northern Europe (Hamburg) as compared to the current Suez Canal route. However, this 40% reduction in distance does not correspond to a 40% of cost saving due to many factors, such as higher construction cost for ice-classed vessels, non-regularity of schedule due to the ever-changing ice conditions, slower sailing speed, navigation difficulties, higher risk, hefty icebreaking service fees and etc.In this research study, NSR’s economic feasibility is examined using voyage simulation where 4,300 TEU container ships (normal open water, normal ice-classed and Aker Arctic double-acting ship) are employed, each make year round service between Yokohama and Hamburg. The annual total cost per TEU shipped by normal open water ship via Suez Canal is compared to the annual total cost per TEU shipped incurred from the ice-classed ships (normal ice-classed and Aker Arctic double-acting ship), taking NSR during the navigable months and Suez Canal for the rest of the year. To make this study flexible, length of NSR navigation season has been divided into three options (3/6/9 months per year). Bachelor of Science (Maritime Studies)
author2 Lum Kit Meng
School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
format Other/Unknown Material
author Wong, Suet Peng.
author_facet Wong, Suet Peng.
author_sort Wong, Suet Peng.
title Arctic shipping - a study on feasibility and future impact on warehousing/shipping routes/shipbuilding
title_short Arctic shipping - a study on feasibility and future impact on warehousing/shipping routes/shipbuilding
title_full Arctic shipping - a study on feasibility and future impact on warehousing/shipping routes/shipbuilding
title_fullStr Arctic shipping - a study on feasibility and future impact on warehousing/shipping routes/shipbuilding
title_full_unstemmed Arctic shipping - a study on feasibility and future impact on warehousing/shipping routes/shipbuilding
title_sort arctic shipping - a study on feasibility and future impact on warehousing/shipping routes/shipbuilding
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/45451
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Northern Sea Route
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Northern Sea Route
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10356/45451
op_rights Nanyang Technological University
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