Cargoes and Vessels: The General Cargo Ship

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The passage discusses different types of cargo ships like general cargo ships, bulk carriers, tankers, LNG carriers, and LASH ships.

The types of cargo ships discussed are general cargo ships, bulk carriers, tankers, LNG carriers, and LASH ships.

Bulk cargoes like grains, ores, and fertilizers are transported in bulk carriers in large under-deck holds without packaging.

CARGOES AND VESSELS

The general cargo ship


During the last few decades shipping has seen a
great deal of change. Until the 20th century the
most important cargo ship was the break-bulk
carrier, sometimes called the general cargo ship or
freighter. The cargo holds on these ships could
carry almost any kind of cargo, both piece goods
and bulk cargo.
CARGOES AND VESSELS
• The cargo was packed into drums, boxes,
bags, bales and crates or on pallets.
CARGOES AND VESSELS
• The ship was loaded and unloaded using
portside cranes and ship’s derricks that
lifted the cargo through the hatches and
stored it into the holds. Cargo could also
be secured by lashing and stored on deck.
CARGOES AND VESSELS
• break-bulk carrier, general cargo ship, freighter- a ship that
carries general cargo
• cargo holds- place on a ship where the cargo is stored
• bulk- not packed
• drum- a large round container for substances like oil or chemicals
• box-a covered rectangular container for storing or transporting
things
• bag- a container made of a flexible material (as paper or plastic
• bale- a large bundle of goods packed and tied up
• crate- a wooden box
• pallet- a platform on which you can load packages or pieces
• portside cranes- large crane on the quay of the port
• ship’s derricks- a smaller crane on a ship
• hatch- the opening through which we load cargo in a cargo hold
BULK CARRIER
• Today modern commercial vessels are highly
specialised, designed to carry specific types of
cargo. The names of the ships tell us what type
of cargo they are designed to carry. The bulk
carrier carries bulk cargo, “loose” cargo, either
“dry bulk” such as coal, grain, iron ore, fertilisers
or “liquid bulk” such as a range of chemicals
including petroleum products.
Bulk carriers
Bulk carriers have huge under-deck
specialised holds where the bulk products
are poured and stored.
Bulk carriers
Bulk carriers come in different sizes, from
the so-called “handysize” bulk carriers of
about 25 000 DWT to very large carriers of
up to 200 000 DWT.
Vocabulary
• bulk carrier- cargo vessel
• coal- substance burnt as fuel
• grain- seeds such as wheat, rice
• iron ore- rock or soil from which you get metal
(iron)
• fertilisers- natural or chemical substances used
for plants to grow
• petroleum- thick oil found in the ground used to
produce petrol
• DWT (Dead Weight Tonnage) total capacity of
a vessel comprising cargo, passengers, fuel, etc.
MULTI-PURPOSE SHIP
• The MS Marina, the ship in our story, is a
type of multi-purpose dry cargo carrier.
“Multi-Purpose Carriers” transport different
kinds of cargo: break-bulk and/or pure bulk
cargoes and/or containers, even reefer
containers for frozen meats or fruit.
Multipurpose carrier
Many of these carriers are
so- called geared vessels,
they are equipped with their
own cargo cranes for
loading and discharging.
Hatch openings are designed
to fit standard container sizes.
Multipurpose carrier
Removable between decks or (‘tweendecks)
increase the number of available holds. In
the huge bulk holds there are removable
bulkheads that help prevent the grain and
other bulk cargoes from shifting.
Multipurpose carrier
• multi-purpose- can be used in many different
ways
• reefer – a vessel that carries refrigerated cargo
• container- a box of standard measures 20ft (1
foot is 30,48 centimetres) or 40 ft for carrying
goods
• tweendecks- extra decks that can be taken out
• bulkhead- wall
The container ship

• It was in the 1960s that the first container


ship was built and since then she has
revolutionised shipping. A container ship is
designed to carry cargo in thousands
ofstandard-size boxes - “containers”,
either 20 ft units or 40 ft units.
Container ship
• At the container terminals these ships can
quickly load and discharge by means of
large quay-side cranes called portainers or
gantry cranes. The cranes lift the
containers off or onto the quay or trucks
and off or onto the ship´s deck.
Container ship
• While a conventional dry cargo vessel may
take 3-4 days to load or discharge, a
container ship can do the same in a matter
of hours. Today container ships are seen
in ports all over the world and are
gradually replacing the general cargo
ships.
Container ship
• Seen from a distance the container ship has a
very characteristic “flat” silhouette. The small
superstructure with the navigating bridge is at
the stern of the ship and the many containers
are stacked fore of the bridge along the whole
length of the vessel.
• portainers or gantry cranes- large cranes that
load or discharge containers
• stacked- put one on top of the other
• fore- in front of
The reefer
The Refrigerated Cargo Carrying Vessels,
reefers, are built to carry fruit, meat,
vegetables and other refrigerated food
products that require refrigerating
equipment to
stay fresh
during a sea
voyage.
The reefer
The cargo can be stowed on pallets in the refrigerated
holds. Some reefers carry reefer containers. Perhaps the
most famous of these types of vessels are the banana
carriers, trading between the Caribbean and Europe.
refrigerating equipment- cooling installations
The RORO vessel
• Another special cargo vessel is known as
the RORO, which means a roll-on, roll-off
vessel. The RORO ships have huge stern
(or bow) doors which are lowered to make
a bridge
from the ship
to the wharf.
RORO-vessel
• On the RORO-vessel whole trucks can roll
on and off very rapidly at ports. RORO is
often used to carry large numbers of
cars/motor vehicles, which are rapidly
loaded via a stern ramp.
• The wharf machinery can also get into to
the ship’s interior and collect cargo to
bring it ashore. The roll-on, roll-off vessel
comes in two main types: the passenger
RORO and the cargo RORO.
Passenger ferry
Modern car-passenger ferries take care of most
passenger traffic on short-sea routes in the
Baltic Sea and the North Sea. It is probably the
only type of cargo vessel that most people have
travelled on. The vehicles are driven on and off
through a stern door (sometimes a bow door)
and stored on the car deck
below the passenger
accommodation
areas.
Passenger ferry
Since the Estonia disaster safety regulations
on board car- passenger ferries have
become stricter and the door structures
have improved.
The Estonia ferry sank with 850 lives lost in
the heavy storm and the car deck was
flooded.
The Estonia ferry
The oil tanker

• One of the most important vessels in the


world's merchant fleets today is the tanker.
The growth in size of the tankers has been
extremely rapid during recent years.
Tankers carry liquid cargo, not only oil, in
tanks. The best known are the oil tankers.

Oil carrier
• They come in two kinds: the crude carrier, which
carries crude oil, and the clean products tanker,
which carries refined products such as petrol,
gasoline, aviation fuel, kerosene and paraffin
(wax). Tankers range in all sizes from small
bunkering tankers of 1000 DWT, used for
refuelling larger vessels, to the real giants the
VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier) of 200 000 -
300 000 DWT and the ULCC ( Ultra Large Crude
Carrier) of over 300 000 DWT.
LNG and LPG
(Liquified Natural Gas) and the LPG carrier (Liquified Petroleum Gas)
are really a kind of tanker and came in in the nineteen-hundreds.
LNG and LPG are not the easiest of cargoes to transport. In its
natural state, LNG is a gas; it must be pressurised into being liquid
or kept as a liquid by reducing the temperature in order
to transport it. The shape of the LNG Carrier, with the huge round Moss
tanks seen along the deck, has
led to the nickname of
“Dinosaur Eggs Carriers”.
LNG vessels
The LNG vessels carry explosive gas - kept
at below freezing temperatures - as an
unstable liquid. This means that they carry
extremely dangerous cargo. The vessels
must be maintained very thoroughly and
safety measures on board have to be very
strict.
LNG vessels
In 1990, the United States enacted the
Oil Pollution Act (OPA). It requires a
gradual introduction of tankers with
double hulls, i.e. not just with
double bottoms but also double
on both sides. Full compliance with the law
is as far away as 2015.
This stamp shows a picture of the modern
double-hulled Mobil Oil tanker ‘Eagle’,
built 1993, of 284,493 DWT.
However, most tankers trading worldwide
today are still single-hulled vessels.
LASH
Another kind of cargo carrier is the Lash. LASH means
lighter aboard ship (lighter =barge). The vessel has a
huge 500 ton crane on the main deck. The holds are
divided into cells to make room for the LASH barges
which the crane plucks from the water at the stern of the
ship, carries along the deck and stows in the ship’s cells
for the voyage.
Lash
LASH barges are loaded at inland river and ocean
ports. The barges are then towed to meet the
LASH mother vessel and lifted aboard. When
the mother vessel arrives at its port of
destination the huge crane lowers the LASH
barges into the water, where they are then
towed to their final destination. A Lash ship does
not need to tie up to a
port during discharging.

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