| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
Contact: Anne Davis Burns |
| March 26, 2002 |
(703) 841-9300 |
Tank Barge Industry Leads the Way in Double-Hull
Conversions
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The American Waterways Operators
(AWO), the trade association for the tugboat, towboat and barge
industry, has affirmed that the tank barge industry is leading the
way as American companies make the multi-billion dollar investment
required to transform the nation's fleet of oil-carrying tank vessels
into environmentally friendly double hulls. More than 65 percent
of the U.S. tank barge fleet is double-hulled today, more than 13
years before the 2015 deadline set by Congress in the landmark Oil
Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA 90).
Even as government and industry sources agree that
there is a surplus of tonnage on the market today - more vessels
than are needed to meet U.S. demand for oil transportation - America's
tank barge operators are leading the transition to an all-double-hull
fleet. According to U.S. Coast Guard data, U.S. tank barge operators
have built 567 new double-hulled petroleum barges for inland and
coastal service since the Oil Pollution Act was passed in 1990.
The pace of new construction has accelerated in recent years, with
23 percent of this total - 134 double-hulled barges - built between
1999 and 2001. More new double hulls are on the order books, including
at least eight oceangoing tank barges scheduled for delivery in
2002, plus options for 10 others and pending contracts for the conversion
of seven oceangoing tank barges from single to double hull.
The capital investment required to overhaul the U.S.
tank barge fleet is significant: a 30,000 barrel inland tank barge
costs some $1.45 million to build, while a 120,000-140,000 barrel
coastal tank barge carries a price tag of $15-17 million. Because
a double-hull barge is much larger than a single hull with the same
carrying capacity, vessel owners must often invest an additional
$9-10 million for a more powerful tugboat to move the larger barge.
Retrofitting (adding a double hull to an existing single hull barge)
is an option for some coastal tank barges and can shorten delivery
time by several months, but the cost remains high: some $12-13 million
for a 120,000-140,000 barrel barge. The cost of a state-of-the-art
articulated tug-barge unit, or ATB, runs $26-27 million.
Given the size of the capital outlay required, companies
must weigh many factors in deciding when to build a new double-hulled
vessel. Paramount is demand for oil transportation -- how strong
shipper demand is, and what the likelihood is that freight rates
will be sufficient to offset the cost of such a major investment.
If demand is there, building will follow. Building vessels of any
kind in the absence of demand hurts the industry, artificially depressing
freight rates and undermining the industry's ability to shoulder
the investment in modern, environmentally friendly vessels to meet
future needs.
Government experts from the Coast Guard to the General
Accounting Office to the Maritime Administration agree that U.S.
tank vessel capacity today exceeds demand for oil transportation,
and will continue to do so until at least 2004. As American companies
strongly committed to the U.S. market, the members of the American
Waterways Operators stand ready to make the investment in new double-hulled
vessels to meet the nation's energy transportation needs, and to
continue providing safe, environmentally friendly, and economically
efficient service to U.S. shippers and consumers.
For more information about AWO, visit www.americanwaterways.com,
or call AWO's headquarters at (703) 841-9300.
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The American Waterways Operators (AWO) is the national trade association
for the inland and coastal tugboat, towboat, and barge industry. AWO's
members operate on the Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf Coasts of the United
States; throughout the full range of our nation's 25,000-mile inland
and intracoastal waterway system; and in our inland and coastal ports
and harbors.
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