Types of Ships
Types of Ships
Types of Ships
Dashboard > Freight Forwarder > Sea Transport > Types of Ships IN PROGRESS
These ships carry mail, supplies and also general cargo to out-of the way destinations. They basically
connect small isolated communities. These ships generally have provision for accommodation which is
higher than a usual freighter.
For example the “Aranui 3” is a ship which belongs to this category which departs Tahiti about 16 times
a year, connecting the remote islands of Tuamotu and Marquesas of French Polynesia in South Pacific.
This is a cargo ship which has been built with passenger comfort in mind; offers tastefully decorated
spacious accommodations and provide recreational facilities as swimming pool, gym, scuba diving and
snorkelling etc.
Expedition Ships
These ships are usually small for flexibility and ease of maneuverability in navigating through
uncharted areas. These ships may have special purpose equipments installed to meet specific
requirements of the expedition like prolonged sailing in high latitudes. Other than scientific research
purposes, these ships are also used for adventure tourism.
Coasters
These are small cargo ships running on feeder routes. They usually transport the cargo to (from)
different locations which are transhipped from (to) large container ships.
They are usually shallow hulled for plying in lower draft waterways.
Bulk carriers
These are large single deck vessels and their cargo usually comprises of coal, mineral ores, food grains
and other produces. Basically they handle all types of bulk cargo which cannot be containerized.
Mini bulkers have single holds and are designed for river transport.
Panama ships are those which can pass through the Panama Canal.
Capesize ships cannot pass through the Panama Canal and have to travel around Cape Horn while
travelling between Pacific and Atlantic Ocean.
For loading and unloading of bulk cargo sometimes the ships have necessary cranes and other
material handling facilities and are known as “geared” bulk carriers. However they usually do not have
such facilities and are referred to as “gearless” bulk carriers.
As bulk cargo can be very abrasive and corrosive, they affect the life of bulk carriers leading to higher
risk of operations. New regulations have been introduced to improve ships design, inspection and the
process of abandoning to reduce the hazards in operations.
Tankers
Tankers have on board facility for oil pumping, heating and certain other special provisions. A tanker
generally sticks to a single product. According to the type of cargo, they are further classified into.
Oil tankers: These are bulk ships dedicated to the transport of unrefined oil. These are largest
ships in the world and are further classified as:
Up to 80,000DWT : Afframax
Up to 300,000 DWT : VLCC (very large crude carriers)
Beyond 300,000 DWT : ULCC (ultra large crude carriers)
VLCC and ULCC are very large vessels and can call on a few ports in the world because of the draft
required. Usually a VLCC or ULCC does not enter a port but stay outside the port in deep waters from
where the oil cargo is transferred through smaller crude carriers.
Product tankers: Product carriers transport refined products as gasoline, diesel oil or others
refined products. The vessel may carry up to six different products of the piping and other
facilities are available for proper segregation. These vessels are in the range of 1000- 60,000
DWT.
LNG tankers: LNG tankers are specially designed to carry Liquefied Natural Gas. In recent years
there has been increase in the number of such vessels around the world.
Acid tankers: Acid and chemical tankers are those which carry in bulk products listed in Chapter
17 of the International Bulk Chemical Code. The tanks are designed to ensure safe transport of
liquid products of corrosive nature and are usually made.
Edible oil tankers: Edible oil tankers are a form of acid or chemical tankers which carry vegetable
oils. Their tankers are specially designed with epoxy coating.
These ships are used for transporting perishable goods as fruits, meat, fish, vegetables, dairy products
and other foodstuffs. These ships can keep the cargo under controlled temperature.
Side door vessels: the sides are lowered to serve as loading and discharging ramps for the
forklifts. This type is particularly designed for short distance trade.
Conventional reefer vessels: they have traditional cranes suitable for handling of palletized
cargo.
Each cargo carrying space is lined by layers of insulation material. The floor is also double skinned with
gratings with precisely measured air passage openings to maintain even circulation of cooling air. The
temperature is usually in the range of -30 to 12◦ C depending on the cargo.
These ships operate at higher cruising speeds of 18-23 knots to reduce the carriage times of
perishable items.
Livestock Carriers
These ships have provisions to exclusively transport large number of line animals which are mostly
domestic breeds of sheep and cattle.
Open livestock carriers: On these ships the animal pens are installed on open decks. This
reduces the reliance on mechanical ventilation system. However as wind speed would greatly
influence the ventilation level in these pens, supplementary mechanised ventilation is also
available.
Closed livestock carriers: In this type of ships, controlled environment is provided to the animals
and they are also protected from adverse weather conditions.
LNG Carriers
As already explained LNG tankers are specially designed to carry Liquefied Natural Gas.
LNG Tankers have a capacity of up to 140,000m3, but larger vessels with a capacity of 200,000m3 or
more are under development.
Safe transportation of LNG is paramount therefore the carriers that transport it have.
Double-hull specifically designed to handle the low temperature of LNG and provides
protection for cargo in the event of a collision, grounding, and from radiant heat.
Cargo tanks are located away from the hull.
Gas detectors and safety alarms situated between the steel hulls which and continuously
monitor for cargo leaks.
In a typical cargo cycle, the tankers are first filled with inert gas using the inert gas plant which burns
diesel to replace the oxygen in the tanks with carbon-dioxide. This reduces the explosive atmosphere
in the tanks.
While loading, the LNG is initially warmed up and blown into the tanks to displace the “inert gas”. After
the tanks are free of inert gas, they are cooled down to about -150◦ and loading takes place.
Car Carriers
These are basically Ro-Ro type of ships which have large rectangular design and are purpose built to
carry large number of cars. These are also known as PCC (Pure Car Carrier) or PC/TC (Pure Car/ Truck
Carrier)
On these ships, the cargo capacity is often measured in RT or RT43 units who are based on a 1966
Toyota or by car equivalent units (CEU).
Manufacturers of cars, mainly in Japan, Korea and Europe, use these vessels to ship large quantities of
their products around the world. Every Japanese, Korean car one comes across in Europe may have
been brought across on one of these car carrier vessels.
Lately with the sinking of few such ships, criticisms have started on the inherent weakness in the
design of such vessels with a single massive hold. In case water gets into the hold, with no watertight
bulkheads and the free surface effect of that, water rapidly de-stabilises the whole vessel and in a
matter of seconds they can capsize.
Container Ships
The most popular method of transporting goods by sea is the container ship. Containers come in
standard 20 foot and 40 foot sizes, which means that ships can be loaded and unloaded very quickly –
and time is valuable for the shipping lines.
A ships container capacity will be described as so many TEU – this stands for ‘twenty foot equivalent
units’. Therefore, if a ship could carry 1000 forty foot containers, that is the equivalent of 2000 twenty
foot containers – meaning its capacity is 2000 TEU.
Modern container ships are fast – they can cross the Atlantic in as little as 7 days – and the largest
ones are so huge that you get a very smooth ride in all but the roughest conditions. These are factors
that may be considered an advantage by some people.
The heavy lift ships are designed to carry excessively large loads that even cargo ships cannot bear,
such as other ships, drilling rigs or anything else too large or heavy to be easily transported on a
conventional ship.
A particular feature of heavy lift ships is the semi-submergence capability for lifting another ship out of
the water and transporting it. Semi-submerging vessels are also known as a “flo/flo” (float-on/float-
off).
These vessels have a long and low well decks that can go down under water allowing oil platforms,
other vessels, or other floating cargo to be moved into position for loading. The tanks are then
pumped out, and the well deck rises higher in the water, lifting its cargo, and is ready to sail wherever
in the world the cargo needs to be transported.
The flo/flo industry’s largest customer base is the oil industry. They have transported many oil drilling
rigs from their construction site to the drilling site at roughly three to four times the speed of a self-
deploying rig.
Tugs
The name Tug Boats gives a fair idea about the size and task of the vessel being discussed.
Tugs or Tug Boats are relatively smaller but very powerful for their size. These are primarily used to tug
or pull vessels that cannot move on their own like disabled ships, oil platforms and barges or those
that should not move like a big or loaded ship in a narrow canal or a crowded harbor. In addition to
these, tug boats are also used as ice breakers or salvage boats and as they are built with firefighting
guns and monitors, they assist in the firefighting duties especially at harbours and when required even
at sea.
Ro-Ro Vessels
Ro-Ro is an acronym for Roll-on/roll-off ships which are used to carry wheeled cargo. The Ro-Ro ship is
different from Lo-Lo (lift on-lift off) ship that uses cranes to load the cargo.
The vehicles in the ship are loaded and unloaded by means of built-in ramps. Consequently they are
like ferries but much larger and have multiple decks to carry thousands of vehicles. Normally these
ramps are made towards the stern (backside) of the ship. In some ships, they are also found on the
bow side (front) as well as the sides. The vessel can be of both military and civilian types.
In the shipping industry usually the cargo is measured by the metric tonne, but Ro-Ro cargo is typically
measured in units of ‘lanes in metres’ (LIMs). This is calculated by multiplying cargo length in metres
by the number of decks and by its width in lanes (lane width differs from vessel to vessel and there are
several industry standards).
These are mainly utilised by vehicle manufacturers to transport their products across the world.
Types of Ships
Course Progress
Course Home
Expand All
Freight Planning
9 Topics
Freight Transportation
6 Topics
Surface Transport