Translate

Wednesday, 2 August 2023

Japanese Fisheries Agency authorized purchase Dutch whaling factory Willem Barendsz according to the Commercial Fisheries Review dated October 1964 No. 10


An item reported that the Japanese Fisheries Agency authorized on 5 August that the joint of 3 Japanese fishing companies purchase the Dutch whaling factory Willem Barendsz (26,830 gross tonnage) together with her 6% international whale quota. The result should be that Japan had 52% of the international whale quota or 4,160 of the 8,000 blue whale limit. The Agency on behalf of the government accepted the catch quota adopted by the four whaling nations for the season 1964-1965.(1)

Note

1. IMO 5389906 and call sign PIQE. Gross tonnage 23.799/26.830 tons, net tonnage 15.090 tons, summer deadweight 26.152 tons, bale capacity 38.000 cubic feet and as dimensions 639.6 x 90.6 x 44.4 (depth) feet. Launched by Dok- en Werf Maatschappij Wilton-Fijenoord N.V., Schiedam, Netherlands with yard number 743 on 20 November 1954, delivered on 9 July 1955 to the N.V. Nederlandse Maatschappij voor de Walvisvaart, Amsterdam, Netherlands (Vinke&Co.), sold to the Atlantic Harvester (Pty) Ltd., South Africa and handed over on 27 October 1965, recommissioned in 1967 homeport Cape Town, South Africa, call sign ZSUL, owned by Willem Barendsz Ltd. and managed by Silverman-Group, both of Cape Town, since 1973 as the Yu Sin, homeport Busan, South Korea-flagged, owned and managed by Korea Wonyang Fisheries Co. Ltd., Busan, renamed Gae Cheog No. 1 in 1978, renamed Gae Cheog in 1981, renamed Ocean Pioneer in 1987 and renamed Gae Cheog in 1996. Sold to be broken up in second quart of 2001 arrived at the shipyard Xinhui, China on 1 June 2001.

No comments:

Post a Comment