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Seaspan ULC

Seaspan ULC (formerly Seaspan Marine Corporation) provides marine-related services to the Pacific Northwest. Within the Group are three shipyards, an intermodal ferry and car float business, and also a tug and barge transportation company that serves both domestic and international markets. Seaspan, is part of the Washington Companies that are owned by Dennis Washington. Kyle Washington (son of Dennis Washington), is the Executive Chairman of Seaspan, who has become a Canadian citizen.[1]

Seaspan ULC
TypePrivate
IndustryShipbuilding, Towing, and Short sea shipping
PredecessorSeaspan Marine Corporation
HeadquartersNorth Vancouver
Area served
Pacific Northwest
Number of employees
2,800
ParentWashington Companies
Websitewww.seaspan.com

Seaspan ULC was formerly known as Seaspan Marine Corporation, and prior to that Washington Marine Group.[2]

Marine transportation

Seaspan ULC

Seaspan ULC has evolved into a prominent marine transportation company serving the West Coast of North America with a large tugboat and barge fleet. Seaspan's barges haul forestry materials (logs, wood chips, hog fuel, lumber, pulp, paper and newsprint), minerals (construction aggregate and limestone), railcars, plus machinery, fuel and supplies to coastal communities. Seaspan also provides ship docking services to the Ports of Vancouver, Victoria, Esquimalt and other BC out ports.

Seaspan Ferries Corporation

Seaspan Ferries Corporation is a commercial roll on - roll off ferry service providing regularly scheduled transportation between British Columbia's Lower Mainland terminal in Delta and Vancouver Island's Nanaimo and Swartz Bay terminals.[3] Based in Delta, B.C., Seaspan Ferries Corporation transports semi-trailer trucks, containers, and rail cars on self-propelled ferries and integrated tug-barge units.[3] The train ferry is the link between the railways on the British Columbia mainland and the Southern Railway of Vancouver Island at Nanaimo.

Ships

 
Seaspan Reliant in Swartz Bay BC Ferries Terminal, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada on 13 July 2018

Ocean tugs

  • Seaspan Royal
  • Seaspan Commodore
  • Seaspan King
  • Starpan marine

Coastal tugs

  • Seaspan Pacer
  • Seaspan Cavalier
  • Seaspan Corsair
  • Seaspan Cutlass
  • Seaspan Queen
  • Seaspan Commander
  • Seaspan Champion
  • Comox Crown
  • HaiSea Guardian
  • Seaspan Protector

Ship assist & escort tugs

  • Seaspan Foam
  • Cates #4
  • Ace
  • Seaspan Kestrel
  • Seaspan Osprey
  • Seaspan Resolution
  • Seaspan Eagle
  • Seaspan Raven
  • Seaspan Falcon
  • Seaspan Hawk
  • Cates #1
  • Cates #3
  • Cates #5
  • Cates #8
  • Cates #10
  • Cates #20

River tugs

  • Seaspan Tempest
  • Seaspan Venture
  • Seaspan Scout
  • JRW

Ferries

  • Seaspan Swift: Seaspan's first of two new dual-fueled/hybrid (diesel, liquefied natural gas and battery) ferries.
  • Seaspan Reliant: the second of Seaspan's LNG-fueled vessel.
  • Princess Superior: Former BCCSS (British Columbia Coast Steamship Service) ferry from 1993 to 1998.
  • Seaspan Challenger/Coastal Spirit: Barge pusher tug (Challenger ex. Hecate Crown of Crown Zellerbach).
  • Seaspan Greg (ex: Greg Yorke): Former F M Yorke & Sons Ltd rail car barge from 1964 to 1972. Renamed to current name in 1974.[4]
  • Fraser Link: Barge (ex. Cordova).
  • Seaspan Pusher: pushing tugboat pusher Fraser Link (ex. Sealink Pusher).
  • Van Isle Link: Barge (ex. Fairbanks). Pushed by Amix tug Arctic Hooper.

Development in progress

Former vessels

  • Pacificat-class ferries: Built by Catarman Ferries International in North Vancouver. Three ferries bought at auction by Seaspan in 2003 from BC Ferries. In 2009 the three ferries were sold to Abu 6 Mar, a luxury yacht builder. In the six years with Seaspan, the ferries were held in storage where they remained up for sale.
  • Seaspan Doris (ex: Doris Yorke): Former F M Yorke & Sons Limited ferry from 1968 to 1972. Built by Victoria Machinery Company of Victoria. Renamed to current name in 1974. As of 2012 the ferry was mothballed in North Vancouver.

Shipyards

Near to Pacific Northwest shipping lanes, Seaspan Shipyards are a resource for the region's important marine industry. The Group's operations consist of three shipyards.

Vancouver Drydock

Located on the north shore of Vancouver Harbour at the eastern end of the former Burrard Dry Dock site, Vancouver Drydock operates two floating drydocks with lifting capacities of 36,000 tonnes in a Panamax beam dock, and 30,000 tonnes in a self-contained deployable dock.

Seaspan plans to extend the Vancouver Drydock a further 40 metres (130 ft) into Burrard Inlet, and then add three more smaller dry docks to increase its ship repair capacity at this site, to allow for increased shipbuilding efforts at its other sites.[6]

Vancouver Shipyards

Vancouver Shipyards designs, constructs, maintains, and repairs all types of vessels. The yard's facilities include a major steel forming shop, a large fabrication and assembly hall, a totally enclosed paint facility, and a SyncroLift capable of lifting vessels up to 1,200 tonnes.

Victoria Shipyards

Utilizing the Esquimalt Graving Dock, owned and operated by Public Services and Procurement Canada (formerly Public Works and Government Services Canada), Victoria Shipyards can drydock and repair vessels up to 100,000 DWT. Victoria Shipyards is the largest ship repair company on Canada's Pacific coast.

Other services

Marine Petrobulk

For over a quarter of a century, Marine Petrobulk has supplied all grades of bunker fuels to vessels entering the ports of Vancouver, New Westminster, Victoria, Prince Rupert, Kitimat and Nanaimo.

History

Note: There are many differences in dates between the Seaspan corporate history web page and other references; in such cases, the dates stated in the most reliable reference and on the Seaspan corporate history web page are both given.

Seaspan, as it is known today, is the product of a series of acquisitions and mergers in the coastal marine transportation and shipbuilding/ship repair business. Seaspan was created in 1970 by the merger of two prominent coastal towing firms: Vancouver Tug Boat Company (formed in 1898 by Harry A Jones) and Island Tug & Barge (formed in 1924 by Harold Elworthy).[7] In addition to being the largest tug and barge operation on the lower coast, Vancouver Tug also owned Vancouver Shipyards. In 1968[8] or 1969,[7] Vancouver Tug was acquired by the construction firm Dillingham Corporation, while Island Tug & Barge was acquired by Genstar Ltd. in 1969. The following year, Genstar joined with Dillingham to merge Island Tug and Vancouver Tug into a new corporation, Seaspan International Ltd. (In 1993 the name "Island Tug and Barge" was sold to the Shields family, of Shields Navigation, and the current Island Tug and Barge is not affiliated with Seaspan.)

Another prominent branch of the family tree was C H Cates & Sons Towing, generally known as Cates Towing, which was the primary shipdocking tug outfit in the Port of Vancouver for much of the 20th Century. Captain Charles Henry Cates arrived from Machias, Maine in 1885 and built the first cargo-handling wharf on the North Vancouver waterfront. He expanded into boatbuilding and repair and his tugs towed barges of building stone and assisted ships in Burrard Inlet.[9] In 1913 he formed C H Cates Towing, then joined with his three sons, all master mariners, to incorporate the company as CH Cates and Sons Limited in 1921.[10]

Vancouver Shipyard was founded in 1902 at the foot of Denman Street in Vancouver's Coal Harbour. Primarily a builder of small fishing and pleasure boats, the company built two minesweepers for the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War.[8] It was acquired by Vancouver Tug in 1954. In 1968[8] or 1969,[7] both Vancouver Tug and Vancouver Shipyards were acquired by Dillingham Corporation and moved to their present site at the foot of Pemberton Avenue in North Vancouver, where a larger shipyard was established. Since that time the company has constructed, outfitted, or converted 192 tugs, barges and ferries at the shipyard.[8]

Seaspan acquired many of the assets of the former Versatile Pacific Shipyards in two separate transactions. First, Seaspan and Allied Shipbuilders formed a partnership and, with assistance from both Federal and Provincial governments, created Vancouver Drydock Company to acquire the floating drydocks and some onshore facilities in North Vancouver from the defunct firm. Seaspan later acquired Allied's interest in the company.

Meanwhile, in 1994 Vancouver Shipyards (Esquimalt) Ltd. (now Victoria Shipyards) was created at the Esquimalt Graving Dock to fill the void left when the Yarrows shipyard in Esquimalt went bankrupt. Since then, Victoria Shipyards has become prominent in refitting and repair of cruise ships and vessels of the Royal Canadian Navy, including life-extension servicing of the five Halifax-class frigates based at CFB Esquimalt and the four Victoria-class submarines. It built the Orca-class patrol vessel fleet for the Royal Canadian Navy, constructed over two dozen search and rescue lifeboats for the Canadian Coast Guard, and assembled and launched the newest Seabus, the Burrard Pacific Breeze.[11]

Chronological history of Seaspan

([7] except where noted)

  • 1970 - Seaspan International Ltd is created.
  • 1972 - Seaspan acquires F.M. Yorke & Sons Ltd.
  • 1973 - Genstar purchased Dillingham's interest and obtained full ownership of Seaspan.
  • 1977 - Seaspan acquires Gulf of Georgia Towing.
  • 1980 - Marine Petrobulk Ltd (50% owned by Seaspan) is created to provide fuelling services to vessels in the ports of Vancouver, New Westminster, Victoria, Nanaimo, Kitimat and Prince Rupert.[12]
  • 1986 - Imasco Ltd. acquires Genstar and gains controlling interest in Seaspan, then sells Seaspan to McLuan Capital Group later that year.
  • 1992 - Dennis Washington makes his first investment in British Columbia's marine industry by purchasing C. H. Cates & Sons Towing and its subsidiary Seaforth Towing. This is when Washington Marine Group was first formed.
  • 1995 - Washington acquires Norsk Towing from Fletcher Challenge.
  • 1996 - Washington purchases Seaspan.
  • 1997 - Washington purchases Kingcome Navigation from MacMillan Bloedel. Kingcome's roots go back to 1912 when it was formed to tow logs from logging camps to the paper mill in Powell River, British Columbia.
  • 1998 - Washington purchases the rail and truck ferry service of Coastal Marine Operations from the Canadian Pacific Railway; it becomes a subsidiary of Seaspan and is renamed Seaspan Coastal Intermodal.[13]
  • 1999 - Seaspan, Cates, Seaforth, Norsk and Kingcome are all amalgamated into Seaspan International. Dennis Washington sets up Washington Marine Group with separate divisions for towing, shipbuilding and ship repair, coastal intermodal, and bunkering services.
  • 2010 - Vancouver Shipyards is shortlisted for the Federal Government's National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy (NSPS). The program, worth CAD$35 billion, is planned to build replacement ships for the Royal Canadian Navy and Canadian Coast Guard over a 30-year period. Two Canadian shipyards will be selected, one to build combat vessels, the other non-combat vessels.[14]
  • 2011 - In a corporate restructuring, Washington Marine Group is renamed Seaspan Marine Corporation; the shipbuilding, coastal ferries and bunkering services become subsidiaries of the towing division.
  • 2011 - As the winning bidder of the $8 billion non-combat package of a $35 billion federal shipbuilding contract on 19 October 2011, Seaspan Marine will build seven and possibly eight vessels for the Canadian Coast Guard and Department of National Defence. These will include scientific research vessels, fisheries vessels, polar icebreaker CCGS John G. Diefenbaker, and two or three support vessels for the Royal Canadian Navy.[1][15][16]
  • 2012 – Seaspan's Vancouver Shipyards commences the $170 million Shipyard Modernization Project in preparation for federal shipbuilding contracts under the NSS program.[17]
  • 2014 – Canada's largest permanent gantry crane arrives at Seaspan's Vancouver Shipyards. The crane weighs in at 300 tonnes, stands 80 metres (260 ft) high and spans 76 metres (249 ft).[18]
  • 2018 Victoria Shipyards along with Davie and Halifax Shipyards share a $7 billion contract to maintain and repair the Halifax-class frigates and will be responsible for the five frigates based at CFB Esquimalt.[19]

References

  1. ^ a b . The Globe and Mail. 25 May 2012. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
  2. ^ "Marine corporation revives Seaspan". North Shore News. 6 February 2011.
  3. ^ a b . seaspan.com. Archived from the original on 15 November 2013. Retrieved 24 August 2014.
  4. ^ Greg George
  5. ^ "Joint support ship (JSS)". 13 March 2013.
  6. ^ Penner, Derrick (25 July 2021). "Seaspan plan to expand North Van dry dock ruffles its waterfront neighbours". Vancouver Sun. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d "History". Seaspan. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  8. ^ a b c d Colton, Tim. . Archived from the original on 27 August 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  10. ^ "Cates Towing" (PDF). District of North Vancouver Socio-Historical Service Infrastructure. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  11. ^ Colton, Tim. . Archived from the original on 27 August 2011. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  12. ^ . www.globmaritime.com. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012.
  13. ^ "Seaspan Ferries Corporation". Seaspan. Retrieved 24 August 2014.
  14. ^ http://www.seaspan.com/_global/_content/docs/vsy1013.pdf Retrieved 15 June 2011 23 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Jubilation as Halifax Shipyard awarded contract". CBC News. 19 October 2011. Retrieved 21 October 2011.
  16. ^ "East, West coasts win shipbuilding contracts, Quebec frozen out". Vancouver Sun. 19 October 2011. Retrieved 21 October 2011.
  17. ^ "Shipyard Modernization Project". North Shore News. 21 October 2012. Retrieved 18 May 2017.
  18. ^ "Canada's largest permanent gantry crane arrives at Seaspan's Vancouver Shipyards". BC Shipping News. 21 October 2012. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
  19. ^ Kines, Lindsay (2 November 2018). "Victoria Shipyards to share in $7-billion ship project". Times Colonist. The Canadian Press. Retrieved 4 August 2021.

External links

  • Seaspan ULC corporate site

seaspan, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve, removing, promotio. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Seaspan ULC news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Seaspan ULC news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Seaspan ULC formerly Seaspan Marine Corporation provides marine related services to the Pacific Northwest Within the Group are three shipyards an intermodal ferry and car float business and also a tug and barge transportation company that serves both domestic and international markets Seaspan is part of the Washington Companies that are owned by Dennis Washington Kyle Washington son of Dennis Washington is the Executive Chairman of Seaspan who has become a Canadian citizen 1 Seaspan ULCTypePrivateIndustryShipbuilding Towing and Short sea shippingPredecessorSeaspan Marine CorporationHeadquartersNorth VancouverArea servedPacific NorthwestNumber of employees2 800ParentWashington CompaniesWebsitewww seaspan comSeaspan ULC was formerly known as Seaspan Marine Corporation and prior to that Washington Marine Group 2 Contents 1 Marine transportation 1 1 Seaspan ULC 1 2 Seaspan Ferries Corporation 2 Ships 2 1 Ocean tugs 2 2 Coastal tugs 2 3 Ship assist amp escort tugs 2 4 River tugs 2 5 Ferries 2 6 Development in progress 2 7 Former vessels 3 Shipyards 3 1 Vancouver Drydock 3 2 Vancouver Shipyards 3 3 Victoria Shipyards 4 Other services 4 1 Marine Petrobulk 5 History 5 1 Chronological history of Seaspan 6 References 7 External linksMarine transportation EditSeaspan ULC Edit Seaspan ULC has evolved into a prominent marine transportation company serving the West Coast of North America with a large tugboat and barge fleet Seaspan s barges haul forestry materials logs wood chips hog fuel lumber pulp paper and newsprint minerals construction aggregate and limestone railcars plus machinery fuel and supplies to coastal communities Seaspan also provides ship docking services to the Ports of Vancouver Victoria Esquimalt and other BC out ports Seaspan Ferries Corporation Edit Seaspan Ferries Corporation is a commercial roll on roll off ferry service providing regularly scheduled transportation between British Columbia s Lower Mainland terminal in Delta and Vancouver Island s Nanaimo and Swartz Bay terminals 3 Based in Delta B C Seaspan Ferries Corporation transports semi trailer trucks containers and rail cars on self propelled ferries and integrated tug barge units 3 The train ferry is the link between the railways on the British Columbia mainland and the Southern Railway of Vancouver Island at Nanaimo Ships Edit Seaspan Reliant in Swartz Bay BC Ferries Terminal Vancouver Island British Columbia Canada on 13 July 2018 Ocean tugs Edit Seaspan Royal Seaspan Commodore Seaspan King Starpan marineCoastal tugs Edit Seaspan Pacer Seaspan Cavalier Seaspan Corsair Seaspan Cutlass Seaspan Queen Seaspan Commander Seaspan Champion Comox Crown HaiSea Guardian Seaspan ProtectorShip assist amp escort tugs Edit Seaspan Foam Cates 4 Ace Seaspan Kestrel Seaspan Osprey Seaspan Resolution Seaspan Eagle Seaspan Raven Seaspan Falcon Seaspan Hawk Cates 1 Cates 3 Cates 5 Cates 8 Cates 10 Cates 20River tugs Edit Seaspan Tempest Seaspan Venture Seaspan Scout JRWFerries Edit Seaspan Swift Seaspan s first of two new dual fueled hybrid diesel liquefied natural gas and battery ferries Seaspan Reliant the second of Seaspan s LNG fueled vessel Princess Superior Former BCCSS British Columbia Coast Steamship Service ferry from 1993 to 1998 Seaspan Challenger Coastal Spirit Barge pusher tug Challenger ex Hecate Crown of Crown Zellerbach Seaspan Greg ex Greg Yorke Former F M Yorke amp Sons Ltd rail car barge from 1964 to 1972 Renamed to current name in 1974 4 Fraser Link Barge ex Cordova Seaspan Pusher pushing tugboat pusher Fraser Link ex Sealink Pusher Van Isle Link Barge ex Fairbanks Pushed by Amix tug Arctic Hooper Development in progress Edit Protecteur class auxiliary vessel for Royal Canadian Navy HMCS Protecteur construction commenced June 2018 with delivery 2022 2023 5 HMCS Preserver TBD with delivery expected in 2023 2024Former vessels Edit Pacificat class ferries Built by Catarman Ferries International in North Vancouver Three ferries bought at auction by Seaspan in 2003 from BC Ferries In 2009 the three ferries were sold to Abu 6 Mar a luxury yacht builder In the six years with Seaspan the ferries were held in storage where they remained up for sale Seaspan Doris ex Doris Yorke Former F M Yorke amp Sons Limited ferry from 1968 to 1972 Built by Victoria Machinery Company of Victoria Renamed to current name in 1974 As of 2012 the ferry was mothballed in North Vancouver Shipyards EditNear to Pacific Northwest shipping lanes Seaspan Shipyards are a resource for the region s important marine industry The Group s operations consist of three shipyards Vancouver Drydock Edit Located on the north shore of Vancouver Harbour at the eastern end of the former Burrard Dry Dock site Vancouver Drydock operates two floating drydocks with lifting capacities of 36 000 tonnes in a Panamax beam dock and 30 000 tonnes in a self contained deployable dock Seaspan plans to extend the Vancouver Drydock a further 40 metres 130 ft into Burrard Inlet and then add three more smaller dry docks to increase its ship repair capacity at this site to allow for increased shipbuilding efforts at its other sites 6 Vancouver Shipyards Edit Vancouver Shipyards designs constructs maintains and repairs all types of vessels The yard s facilities include a major steel forming shop a large fabrication and assembly hall a totally enclosed paint facility and a SyncroLift capable of lifting vessels up to 1 200 tonnes Victoria Shipyards Edit Utilizing the Esquimalt Graving Dock owned and operated by Public Services and Procurement Canada formerly Public Works and Government Services Canada Victoria Shipyards can drydock and repair vessels up to 100 000 DWT Victoria Shipyards is the largest ship repair company on Canada s Pacific coast Other services EditMarine Petrobulk Edit For over a quarter of a century Marine Petrobulk has supplied all grades of bunker fuels to vessels entering the ports of Vancouver New Westminster Victoria Prince Rupert Kitimat and Nanaimo History EditNote There are many differences in dates between the Seaspan corporate history web page and other references in such cases the dates stated in the most reliable reference and on the Seaspan corporate history web page are both given Seaspan as it is known today is the product of a series of acquisitions and mergers in the coastal marine transportation and shipbuilding ship repair business Seaspan was created in 1970 by the merger of two prominent coastal towing firms Vancouver Tug Boat Company formed in 1898 by Harry A Jones and Island Tug amp Barge formed in 1924 by Harold Elworthy 7 In addition to being the largest tug and barge operation on the lower coast Vancouver Tug also owned Vancouver Shipyards In 1968 8 or 1969 7 Vancouver Tug was acquired by the construction firm Dillingham Corporation while Island Tug amp Barge was acquired by Genstar Ltd in 1969 The following year Genstar joined with Dillingham to merge Island Tug and Vancouver Tug into a new corporation Seaspan International Ltd In 1993 the name Island Tug and Barge was sold to the Shields family of Shields Navigation and the current Island Tug and Barge is not affiliated with Seaspan Another prominent branch of the family tree was C H Cates amp Sons Towing generally known as Cates Towing which was the primary shipdocking tug outfit in the Port of Vancouver for much of the 20th Century Captain Charles Henry Cates arrived from Machias Maine in 1885 and built the first cargo handling wharf on the North Vancouver waterfront He expanded into boatbuilding and repair and his tugs towed barges of building stone and assisted ships in Burrard Inlet 9 In 1913 he formed C H Cates Towing then joined with his three sons all master mariners to incorporate the company as CH Cates and Sons Limited in 1921 10 Vancouver Shipyard was founded in 1902 at the foot of Denman Street in Vancouver s Coal Harbour Primarily a builder of small fishing and pleasure boats the company built two minesweepers for the Royal Canadian Navy during the Second World War 8 It was acquired by Vancouver Tug in 1954 In 1968 8 or 1969 7 both Vancouver Tug and Vancouver Shipyards were acquired by Dillingham Corporation and moved to their present site at the foot of Pemberton Avenue in North Vancouver where a larger shipyard was established Since that time the company has constructed outfitted or converted 192 tugs barges and ferries at the shipyard 8 Seaspan acquired many of the assets of the former Versatile Pacific Shipyards in two separate transactions First Seaspan and Allied Shipbuilders formed a partnership and with assistance from both Federal and Provincial governments created Vancouver Drydock Company to acquire the floating drydocks and some onshore facilities in North Vancouver from the defunct firm Seaspan later acquired Allied s interest in the company Meanwhile in 1994 Vancouver Shipyards Esquimalt Ltd now Victoria Shipyards was created at the Esquimalt Graving Dock to fill the void left when the Yarrows shipyard in Esquimalt went bankrupt Since then Victoria Shipyards has become prominent in refitting and repair of cruise ships and vessels of the Royal Canadian Navy including life extension servicing of the five Halifax class frigates based at CFB Esquimalt and the four Victoria class submarines It built the Orca class patrol vessel fleet for the Royal Canadian Navy constructed over two dozen search and rescue lifeboats for the Canadian Coast Guard and assembled and launched the newest Seabus the Burrard Pacific Breeze 11 Chronological history of Seaspan Edit 7 except where noted 1970 Seaspan International Ltd is created 1972 Seaspan acquires F M Yorke amp Sons Ltd 1973 Genstar purchased Dillingham s interest and obtained full ownership of Seaspan 1977 Seaspan acquires Gulf of Georgia Towing 1980 Marine Petrobulk Ltd 50 owned by Seaspan is created to provide fuelling services to vessels in the ports of Vancouver New Westminster Victoria Nanaimo Kitimat and Prince Rupert 12 1986 Imasco Ltd acquires Genstar and gains controlling interest in Seaspan then sells Seaspan to McLuan Capital Group later that year 1992 Dennis Washington makes his first investment in British Columbia s marine industry by purchasing C H Cates amp Sons Towing and its subsidiary Seaforth Towing This is when Washington Marine Group was first formed 1995 Washington acquires Norsk Towing from Fletcher Challenge 1996 Washington purchases Seaspan 1997 Washington purchases Kingcome Navigation from MacMillan Bloedel Kingcome s roots go back to 1912 when it was formed to tow logs from logging camps to the paper mill in Powell River British Columbia 1998 Washington purchases the rail and truck ferry service of Coastal Marine Operations from the Canadian Pacific Railway it becomes a subsidiary of Seaspan and is renamed Seaspan Coastal Intermodal 13 1999 Seaspan Cates Seaforth Norsk and Kingcome are all amalgamated into Seaspan International Dennis Washington sets up Washington Marine Group with separate divisions for towing shipbuilding and ship repair coastal intermodal and bunkering services 2010 Vancouver Shipyards is shortlisted for the Federal Government s National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy NSPS The program worth CAD 35 billion is planned to build replacement ships for the Royal Canadian Navy and Canadian Coast Guard over a 30 year period Two Canadian shipyards will be selected one to build combat vessels the other non combat vessels 14 2011 In a corporate restructuring Washington Marine Group is renamed Seaspan Marine Corporation the shipbuilding coastal ferries and bunkering services become subsidiaries of the towing division 2011 As the winning bidder of the 8 billion non combat package of a 35 billion federal shipbuilding contract on 19 October 2011 Seaspan Marine will build seven and possibly eight vessels for the Canadian Coast Guard and Department of National Defence These will include scientific research vessels fisheries vessels polar icebreaker CCGS John G Diefenbaker and two or three support vessels for the Royal Canadian Navy 1 15 16 2012 Seaspan s Vancouver Shipyards commences the 170 million Shipyard Modernization Project in preparation for federal shipbuilding contracts under the NSS program 17 2014 Canada s largest permanent gantry crane arrives at Seaspan s Vancouver Shipyards The crane weighs in at 300 tonnes stands 80 metres 260 ft high and spans 76 metres 249 ft 18 2018 Victoria Shipyards along with Davie and Halifax Shipyards share a 7 billion contract to maintain and repair the Halifax class frigates and will be responsible for the five frigates based at CFB Esquimalt 19 References Edit a b Safe Harbour The Globe and Mail 25 May 2012 Archived from the original on 13 January 2016 Retrieved 26 May 2012 Marine corporation revives Seaspan North Shore News 6 February 2011 a b Commercial Ferry Seaspan seaspan com Archived from the original on 15 November 2013 Retrieved 24 August 2014 Greg George Joint support ship JSS 13 March 2013 Penner Derrick 25 July 2021 Seaspan plan to expand North Van dry dock ruffles its waterfront neighbours Vancouver Sun Retrieved 4 August 2021 a b c d History Seaspan Retrieved 15 June 2011 a b c d Colton Tim Vancouver Shipyard Archived from the original on 27 August 2011 Retrieved 15 June 2011 Burrard Inlet s North Shore PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 15 June 2011 Cates Towing PDF District of North Vancouver Socio Historical Service Infrastructure Retrieved 15 June 2011 Colton Tim Victoria Shipyard Archived from the original on 27 August 2011 Retrieved 15 June 2011 Marine Petrobulk Ltd Head Office Operators amp Charterers Ship Operation Global Maritime Directory www globmaritime com Archived from the original on 24 March 2012 Seaspan Ferries Corporation Seaspan Retrieved 24 August 2014 http www seaspan com global content docs vsy1013 pdf Retrieved 15 June 2011 Archived 23 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Jubilation as Halifax Shipyard awarded contract CBC News 19 October 2011 Retrieved 21 October 2011 East West coasts win shipbuilding contracts Quebec frozen out Vancouver Sun 19 October 2011 Retrieved 21 October 2011 Shipyard Modernization Project North Shore News 21 October 2012 Retrieved 18 May 2017 Canada s largest permanent gantry crane arrives at Seaspan s Vancouver Shipyards BC Shipping News 21 October 2012 Retrieved 19 May 2017 Kines Lindsay 2 November 2018 Victoria Shipyards to share in 7 billion ship project Times Colonist The Canadian Press Retrieved 4 August 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Seaspan vessels Seaspan ULC corporate site S E Heal Memories of Burrard Dry Dock Company Mariner Life 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Seaspan ULC amp oldid 1135833409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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