Flanked by the ship’s Second Officer and Chief Engineer on the left and the First Officer on the right, guests attending the naming ceremony included (from l to r) Mr Kotak, Captain Shorin, Bernd Neitzel ( from co-owner Lubeca Marine), sponsor Mrs Kamini Kotak, Bertram RC Rickmers and Jessica Klatten.
Flanked by the ship's Second Officer and Chief Engineer on the left and the First Officer on the right, guests attending the naming ceremony included (from L to R) Mr Kotak, Captain Shorin, Bernd Neitzel ( from co-owner Lubeca Marine), sponsor Mrs Kamini Kotak, Bertram RC Rickmers and Jessica Klatten.
Rickmers Tianjin has now joined her sister ship Rickmers Yokohama, seen here in the English Channel, on the Europe India service.

As part of its upgrading program for its Europe India service, Rickmers-Linie, has added the 17,000dwt newbuilding Rickmers Tianjin to the schedule. The base ports served are Hamburg, Antwerp, Genoa, Mumbai and Chennai but the service is capable of serving a wide variety of additional ports on inducement.

Rickmers Tianjin joins her sistership Rickmers Yokohama and the charter ships Linde, Martin and Baltic Winter on the Indian service.

On her maiden voyage from Europe, Rickmers Tianjin was named in the Port of Mumbai on 9 January. This is the first time Rickmers has held a naming ceremony in India but it continues a more modern tradition of choosing for such celebrations locations that are important base ports in the Rickmers global network.

The naming was preceded by a puja, a religious ceremony performed in the morning by three Indian priests (pundits) and attended by the ship’s crew, officers and Capt Dadachanji as the representative of Rickmers.

Rickmers Tianjin’ s sponsor was Mrs Kamini Kotak, a prominent member of the Kotak family which owns United Liner Agencies of India (Pvt) Ltd (ULA), Rickmers-Linie’s general agent in India. Other distinguished guests at the dinner were Mr Rajeev Gupta, Chairman of Mumbai Port Trust and Mr Hazari, Chairman of the Shipping Corporation of India (SCI).

Rickmers Tianjin and Rickmers Yokohama are 17,000dwt vessels each equipped with two 150-ton cranes and an 80-ton crane. This enables them to lift up to 300 tons by twinning the two larger cranes.

Being smaller than the nine 30,000dwt vessels operated by Rickmers on its Round-the-World Pearl String service, the ships employed on the revamped Indian service offer greater flexibility to serve ports such as Mumbai – where locks restrict the size of vessels – as well as various smaller ports on an inducement basis. The Middle East Gulf is now being served primarily by the Pearl String service.

You May Also Like

Vessels set new record for on-time reliability

Ships’ on-time performance reached a record high of 75.7 percent in the second quarter of 2012, up 3.4 percent from the first quarter of…

PH Shippers want underguarding as alternative to GPS seals

THE private sector is urging the Bureau of Customs (BOC) to retain underguarding or the use of the General Transportation Surety Bond (GTSB) when…

OOCL taps Microsoft to digitize operations, eyes $10M cost savings

​Hong Kong-listed Orient Overseas Container Line Limited (OOCL) is partnering with Microsoft Research Asia (MSRA) in applying artificial intelligence (AI) research to improve its…

P3’s port choices not based on ties to terminals

The P3 alliance’s choices of port calls appear less dependent on the carriers’ individual links to terminals and more on other factors beyond close…