World’s first circular ship dismantling yard wins EU backing

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Ship recycling

Circular Maritime Technologies (CMT), a Dutch startup targeting to automate shipbreaking processes, has secured an EU subsidy that would help the company take the project to the next stage of development.

CMT said that it won a subsidy as part of the Kansen voor West III, a program largely financed by the European Regional Development Fund, which is intended for the four main Randstad provinces in the western Netherlands: Noord-Holland, Zuid-Holland, Utrecht, and Flevoland, and four major cities of Amsterdam, The Hague, Rotterdam, and Utrecht.

According to CMT, the proposal was pitched in June and it passed with ‘flying colors.’

The project will now move toward the test and demonstration stage. As disclosed, the central technologies will be tested and improved in 2023, such as the wire-cutting technology with Huisman and the automated block processing with Grimbergen Industrial Systems.

The subsidy is a great step in towards realization of CMT, showing trust in the solution and providing a solid basis to build on. Following this project, the first full-scale CMT solution will be deployed in an existing drydock to dismantle the first ships. Heading towards a truly circular, safe, and competitive solution to ship dismantling. (CMT)

CMT aims to become the world’s first circular ship dismantling yard by developing and integrating technologies to automate the shipbreaking process while taking out the human element to secure a high standard of safety.

The yard will reduce the size of the vessel step by step through various automated tools, up to the point where each part of the ship’s steel structure is reduced to many small pieces. The CMT yard will go from a 3D structure to a 2D material package of steel plates. This process is executed quickly and precisely, managed by tailored control tools and software, but overseen by specialized CMT staff. (CMT)

CMT aims to become the world’s first circular ship dismantling yard by developing and integrating technologies to automate the shipbreaking process while taking out the human element to secure a high standard of safety.

This article by Jasmina Ovcina Mandra appeared first in Offshore Energy News on November 17, 2022.

Image credit: CMT

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