Despite its relatively small size (2023 population: 5.2 million) Norway is a major maritime nation. This may be due in part to its long indented coastline, where it is shorter, and usually faster, to go by sea than detouring around the famous fjords by land. The seagoing skills, and business acumen of many ship owners and shipyards, allowed the country to capitalize on North Sea oil. Its long coast also extends into the arctic, and the country has also developed expertise in northern shipping.
Today, June 15, two ship departures had Norwegian connectons.
Although it was the first to get away from the dock (pilot ordered for 1600 hrs ADT) , the cable ship IT Infinity stood off for a short time as the faster cruise ship Viking Sky sailed from Pier 20 (pilot ordered for 1615 hrs ADT),
Viking Sky was first to pass my position in Point Pleasant Park, and had put on some speed.
The Viking Ocean Cruises ship was delivered in 2017 by Fincantieri, Arcona and rings in at 47,842 gt, with a passenger capacity of 930 in 465 cabins, a crew of 550. It flies the the Norwegian flag and is enrolled in the Norwegian International Registry.
On this trip it sailed from Norway in late May, circumnavigated Iceland, with four port calls, then carried on to Nuuk Greenland for June 11. It arrived in Halifax this morning.
It is now sailing for New York where it will start a new cruise, returning to Halifax June 19, then calling at l'Anse aux Meadows, making two stops in Greenland and seven in Iceland and seven in Norway, ending in Bergen July 15.
The ship is noted for a nail-biting episode in 2019 when a lube oil system failure (due to ship's movement in 30 foot high seas) caused the automatic shut down of its main engines, while near shore in Norway. Helicopters were mobilized from near and far and made 30 trips to evacuate 436 passengers (458 crew reamained on board). First attempts to tow the ship away from land failed, but the crew were able to regain some power, toe lines re-established and the ship was towed to port. Reports indicate the ship was as close as 100 meters from running aground. It was later determined that there was a fault in the lube oil system, and that the ship should not have sailed in the predicted weather conditions.
Sailing for Norway, International Telecom's IT Infinity will be returning to its orginal home.
In February 2024 the Vard shipyard in Brattvaag, Norway was awarded a contract to refit the ship to a higher standard and to modernize existing systems. The work was completed with sea trials in November and the ship sailed from Rognan, Norway, December 18, and arrived in Halifax January 3, 2025.
Since then it has been working in the Gulf of Mexico, out of Port Fourchon, LA and arrived back in Halifax June 9.
Also depearting today, fleet mate IT Integrity is headed for the Panama Canal. It also has Norwegain roots: Built in 2001, its hull came from Aker Tulcea and it was completed by
Soviknes Verft, Sovik. The 2244 gt, 3200 dwt supplier was named Highland Fortress
and worked for several Tidewater operations in Europe until 2020 when
IT acquired the ship and converted it for cable work (including laying,
repair, plough burying and ROV splicing).
IT Integrity file photo from 2022.
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