Converting Platform Supply Vessels Into Dredgers

By David Pitt, Naval Architect at Offshore Ship Designers

In the wake of the well-documented downturn in the oil and gas markets in recent years, an increasing number of platform supply vessels (PSVs) are currently under-utilized or languishing in lay-up, most notably in the US Gulf Coast region.

Various proposals have been made for the repurposing of redundant PSV tonnage. Examples range from windfarm support vessels (SOVs) to container feeder vessels and live fish carriers, with even a recent proposal to convert ice-capable vessels into polar expedition yachts.

But the OSD-IMT design team, in partnership with Gibbs & Cox, has been investigating the potential for converting redundant PSV tonnage into trailing suction hopper dredgers (TSHD) used for the maintenance of navigable waterways.

The OSD-IMT team, part of Offshore Ship Designers (OSD), has designed and built over 20 dredgers while working with Appledore Shipbuilders in North Devon, while Gibbs & Cox, with extensive knowledge of the US commercial and military markets, has seen almost 7,000 vessels built to its designs since 1929.

The conversion proposal

OSD-IMT has carried out a preliminary assessment focusing on the practicalities of PSV/TSHD conversions from a shipyard perspective, taking account of the technical implications on lightship, vessel structure, and stability.

Gibbs & Cox, meanwhile, has completed a review of US Coast Guard statutory requirements and other regulations as they apply to the US market, as well as market research into the economic feasibility of such conversions.

The proven IMT978 PSV design was chosen as the basis vessel for such conversions as it best reflects the size and arrangement of the 10 to 15-year-old candidate vessels identified during the Gibbs & Cox research.

The IMT978 has conventional shaft propulsion driving controllable pitch (CP) propellers via reduction gearboxes with power take-off (PTO) alternators. The engine room is situated forward, as is common in North Sea vessels and typical of the newer Gulf Coast vessels.

To accommodate differences between the cargo tank arrangements typically found on North Sea and Gulf Coast PSVs, two variants were considered – the basic IMT978 in its North Sea configuration with cylindrical mud tanks, and a typical Gulf Coast variant with square mud tanks formed with corrugated bulkheads.

Features of the conversion

A conventional 600 mm dredge system was utilized, providing a 20 m-to-25 m dredging depth capability with an electrically driven inboard pump. If electrical power is not available in the donor vessel, the dredge pump can be driven by a diesel engine with the incorporation of appropriate fire-suppression requirements.

Removal of a section of the safe-haven/cargo rail facilitates fitting of the deck-mounted equipment. The dry bulk tanks and systems can be removed from the vessel and the dredge pump fitted in the vacated space.

Offshore Ship Designers (OSD) has extensive experience in ship conversion. One of the latest conversion projects was a dredger conversion for Kendall Brothers

A hopper has been introduced on the main deck with a coaming height based on the deck’s existing safe working load of 5 t/m2. The repurposed mud tanks are connected to the deck hopper via new deck openings and are fitted with large ventilation trunks. A center line bulkhead is incorporated in the deck tank to improve static stability.

The hopper is loaded via a single pipe supported on the hopper center-line bulkhead.

In common with most PSVs, the vessel trims by the head in light loaded conditions. By way of compensation, an aft deck trim tank has been installed which is rapidly filled by the dredge pump and dumped by gravity as cargo is loaded. Cargo dumping is carried out via a conventional bottom door arrangement that utilises the existing double bottom structure.

Due to US environmental controls on bottom door cargo discharge, a cargo pump-out system has also been incorporated, which enables dredge material to be used for other purposes such as wetland creation / restoration and levee maintenance / construction. To support this, a cargo fluidisation system has also been introduced utilising two high-pressure jetting pumps.

Economic viability

Gibbs & Cox analysis shows that the conversion should be economically viable, but this is clearly dependent on the purchase price of the donor vessel. A comparison has been made between the construction costs of a newbuild 6,300 m3-capacity TSHD and of the 2000m³-capacity IMT978 conversion concept.

The analysis indicates a payback period of 7.5 years for a newbuild, against 6 years for a conversion. This takes account of different spoil capacities using a constant cost per cubic meter of dredged material and a constant number of dredge cycles/day.

The per-cubic-meter cost – and initial capital outlay – of a PSV/TSHD conversion is estimated to be approximately half that of a newbuild, while delivery times associated with a conversion should be approximately one-third those of a newbuild. The final reported costs of a recent OSD-IMT dredger conversion project support these findings.

Positive outcome

The feasibility study on the proposed conversion of redundant OSV tonnage into dredgers indicates that there are no insurmountable technical or statutory issues involved. Economic analysis also suggests that it should be a financially viable option, and such vessels should be competitive in the current dredging market.

The relative success of any conversion, of course, will depend on the suitability and purchase cost of the donor vessel.

Offshore Ship Designers and Gibbs & Cox will be presenting a joint presentation at the New Orleans Workboat show on the 30th of November covering the conversion of PSVs in more detail.

 

About the author

David Pitt is a naval architect at Offshore Ship Designers. Prior to joining the company he worked as a shipyard naval architect for a major defense contractor involved in the UK aircraft carrier program and OPVs for the Irish Naval Service. Whilst working for OSD he has developed designs for both new build and conversion projects in the offshore and dredging markets.

 

Dredging Today has shared the article above with permission from the author. You can read the original post titled “Conversion of PSVs into dredgers for the US and European maintenance market” at Pitt’s Linkedin Page.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Dredging Today.