Mirelle
N/A
Behind the urban myth...
... is an element of truth. Port dues are charged on Gross Tonnage, which (to simplfy grossly) is the volume in hundreds of cubic feet below the
weather deck. It therefore pays to build a container ship with a lower freeboard and rather more containers on deck, rather than vice versa. However, the ship must still meet the loadline and stability requirements.
There is nothing new in this; fifty years ago, long before containers, British ocean greyhounds were scouring the seas with "tonnage hatches" - a hatch about one metre square whicb magically converted the upper deck to a "shelter deck" on which port dues were not charged!
... is an element of truth. Port dues are charged on Gross Tonnage, which (to simplfy grossly) is the volume in hundreds of cubic feet below the
weather deck. It therefore pays to build a container ship with a lower freeboard and rather more containers on deck, rather than vice versa. However, the ship must still meet the loadline and stability requirements.
There is nothing new in this; fifty years ago, long before containers, British ocean greyhounds were scouring the seas with "tonnage hatches" - a hatch about one metre square whicb magically converted the upper deck to a "shelter deck" on which port dues were not charged!