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Josefa slipways
Josefa slipways




josefa slipways

“We hope that with this project, can inspire other ship owners and ship builders to do this kind of ship in the future,” he said.

josefa slipways

M/V Isla Simara is part of the Shogun Ships' initiative to improve the quality of locally built ships, said the company's president Vicente Cordero. “It shows that we can build better, better, and better because we continuously learn,” he added. “This will boost the local ship-building industry in the Philippines,” said Thadedeus Jovelanos, president of Philippine Register of Shipping. The ship is expected to sail on its maiden commercial trip next week from Matnog to Allen towns in Northern Samar. M/V Isla Simara is also the first local RoRo ship with a Marine Evacuation System, a lifesaving device that is similar to an airplane’s evacuation chute through which passengers can slide directly to a lifeboat without getting wet. Josefa Slipways has completed speed and endurance trials as it prepares to deliver two 50-metre multi-mission offshore vessels (MMOV) to the Philippine Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR). It is the first RoRo ship in the Philippines with a modern Automation and Control System that can be monitored real-time in the company’s head office. The shipbuilding industry has been thriving in various provinces such as Batangas, Zambales, Cebu, Cavite, Bataan and Pangasinan. It also maintains a larger facility in Sual, Pangasinan. The 468-seater M/V Isla Simara passenger ship with a 12-meter long vehicle ramp is the brainchild of Shogun Ships Corp. Josefa, a medium-category shipyard has two slipways in its Navotas facility for the efficient docking and launching of marine vessels. MANILA - The first Filipino-made roll-on/roll-off (RoRo) vessel was launched Saturday at North Harbor in the capital, providing a potential boost to the local ship-building industry. This is the first vessel built in the Philippines by Filipino shipbuilders. launches the first Philippine made ship MV Isla Simara at North Harbor in Manila. The company provides turnkey solutions for ship repair, conversion and new ship construction projects complying with the rules of International Classification Society (IACS) or any of Philippine Classification Society.






Josefa slipways