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Jumbo Spends 29 Days in India Coastal Waters

Jumbo’s Fairpartner was recently tasked to sail from the west to the east coast of India travelling almost 2600 nautical miles with three separate cargoes onboard, calling at five ports, all in 29 days. This is the longest time a Jumbo vessel has stayed in Indian waters and performed a complete coastal voyage.

For this extensive trip, they combined three cargo loads of refinery, port and LNG equipment from three clients, Allcargo Logistics Ltd, Total Movements Ltd., and Global Golden Coast Private Ltd in one single voyage to the ports of Hazira, Paradip, Kakinada, Gopalpur and Dhamra. To adhere to the regulations, set by the Indian authorities when sailing coastal, a Special Voyage License (SVL) needed to be issued to us by the Indian authorities for each cargo/client.

This video made by Jumbo’s agent in India Wheel & Time/Gautamraj Sharma shows the detailed footage from loading to discharging in every port.

First Stop – Hazira

The first cargoes loaded in Hazira included a 1250mt EO reactor, a 1075mt wash tower and five other large pieces of heavy refinery equipment for the Indian Oil Corporation (IOCL) Paradip – MEG Project. The reactor was the heaviest piece of equipment ever to be transported to this refinery. It also proved challenging to load due to its short length and concentrated weight. The wash tower, which was also the longest (96m x 7,8m x 8,6m) piece of equipment this plant had ordered, the EO reactor, deethylenizer (715 tonnes), the steam drum (308 tonnes) and the re-condenser were loaded from three separate barges. The smaller pieces, a drying column, fifth effect evaporator and sixth effect evaporator were loaded from the quay side. Each item was safely stowed, some resting on saddles in the hold with the lengthier items being secured to the ship’s deck.

Joining the refinery items was a large piece of LNG plant equipment which the team also loaded onboard in Hazira Port that was destined for Dhamra Port, but first, our voyage takes us to the Paradip Terminal in State of Odisha.

Three Ports of Paradip, Kakinada & Gopalpur

At the congested port of Paradip, all seven refinery equipment items for the MEG project were carefully discharged onto SPMT’s by the crew and the Fairpartner’s two 900t capacity cranes.

With unloading operations complete, the Fairpartner and crew motored on to Kakinada Port where two LHM550 cranes were waiting to be loaded at the quay. OSL, the owners of the fully assembled cranes, organised efficient berthing on arrival at the port and it did not take long before each crane weighing 357mt was loaded onto the weather deck and safely secured by the crew. The Fairpartner then set course for the next stop on the tour; the nearby Port of Gopalpur in Odisha where the cranes were discharged alongside the vessel. 

“It was an extremely smooth and quality operation. We sincerely appreciate your efficient, gracious customer service, the level of detail and accountability you have demonstrated on the project, and the way you conduct business. Also, we would like to express our satisfaction and appreciation to you and the entire Jumbo team for your extraordinary support and teamwork. We must say your experience and knowledge of the crane movement was clear and differentiates between Jumbo and other companies.” Vipin Sharma, Golden Coast Global India Pvt. Ltd.

Final Stop – Dhamra

The final piece of the cargo puzzle which had been loaded in Hazira Port was a 133mt BOG Condenser which needed to be delivered to Dhamra Port close by.

“We are thankful to Jumbo for accommodating our BOG Condenser which was moved from Hazira Port to Dhamra Port by MV Fairpartner. The shipment was completed in a safe and professional manner despite challenges of congestion at the discharging port. We look forward to working with you on many more coastal and international voyages in the time to come.” Janesh Gulati, Managing Director, Total Movements.

“This was complex coordination at its best. To bring everyone concerned on the same page, the Jumbo team along with Wheel & Time shared and discussed the pre-port planning for every port and clarified responsibilities to keep operations safe, under control and flexible enough to make any necessary contingency arrangements.”  Martijn Huijgens, Vessel Manager, Jumbo.

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