|
|
NIEUWS NOUVELLES NEWS |
|
|
Fleet Cleaner demonstrates remote control of hull cleaning services
As hull biofouling and its role in invasive species transfer and carbon emissions due to increased fuel use continue to attract the attention of the IMO and national regulators, Netherlands-based Fleet Cleaner has added to its armoury with the introduction of a third specialist hull cleaning vessel. In addition, the company has unveiled a new remotely controlled operation service for its growing fleet of vessels and ROV cleaning craft.
The hydraulically powered ROV is also ATEX certified. It is attached to the vessel using magnets and has an umbilical connection to Thunderbird 3 through which filtered seawater is pumped to the ROV for use as a pressurised cleaning medium. The pressure can be adjusted according to the degree of fouling and the types of coatings used. The cleaning heads are flexible and can move in all directions so the ROV can be used with confidence on different ship types. The ROV has various aids to help the operator with cleaning and inspection, including lights, cameras front and back, and various sensors that helps the operator navigate over the hull surface. It can cover up to 2,000m2/hr and is designed for 50m underwater operation. All removed fouling is collected and transported via the umbilical back to Thunderbird 3 where it is filtered and stored onboard or transported by barge if the job is a large one. The cleaned filtered water can be released back into the port. Before commissioning the Delft remote centre, Fleet Cleaner’s ROV’s needed to be controlled and operated from the vessels themselves but now operators can continue to work around the clock and the number of crew on the vessels can be reduced. To aid the remote operator, specialised software is used to load the hull drawings of the ship so that the cleaning process is better planned and controlled. As Alex Noordstrand CEO and co-founder of Fleet Cleaner explained, “We now have dedicated, highly skilled operators working in the control centre, sailors on the vessels and we also have service engineers. So, we no longer have all-rounders doing all the jobs, we now have work specialisations to enable our remote hull cleaning and inspections services,” and added, “The remote operation is an essential step for further automation that will increase production and grow our operations sustainably. Working remotely is the future.” Fleet Cleaner’s operations and methods have been approved by authorities in the Netherlands and Belgium and the company is looking to expand. It has recently inspected two further vessels that may very well become Thunderbird 4 and Thunderbird 5. By the end of this year, it expects to be performing daily inspections in seven countries around the world and have grown its operations to meet increasing customer and market demands. Fleet Cleaner is a leading hull inspection and cleaning company founded in 2010 and its innovative robotic cleaning system won several awards during its development phase. The first commercial ship cleaning operation took place in 2016 and since then the services have been approved by ports in The Netherlands and Belgium. Fleet Cleaner’s semi-autonomous hull inspection and cleaning operations can be done during loading and unloading of ships resulting in no downtime and high time efficiency Hull Cleaning Rotterdam - Fleet Cleaner - Hull cleaning during port time.
|
LMB-BML 2007 Webmaster & designer: Cmdt. André Jehaes - email andre.jehaes@lmb-bml.be
|
|
|
|
![]() |
![]() |