The Malta Independent on Sunday

M/V Saint John Paul II – The Hi-Tech Malta/Sicily High Speed Sea Connection

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M/V Saint John Paul II, (Hull 089) afloat at the Incat shipyard in Hobart, Tasmania, is due to be delivered to ship-owners Virtu Ferries on the 24th of this month. A few days later, the vessel will begin a 9,600 nautical miles (17,780 km), 20-day journey to Malta.

This maiden voyage will see her crossing the Indian Ocean, calling at the ports of Fremantle in Western Australia and Colombo in Sri Lanka for refuelling, before passing Somalia, at the Eastern tip of Africa, to transit the length of the Red Sea where she will make her last refuelling stop at the port of Jeddah before entering the Mediterran­ean via the Suez Canal. The last leg of the journey, Port Said to Valletta, should be covered in 30 hours. The vessel will be deployed on the Malta-Sicily route in March.

The Saint John Paul II is being built to conform not only to the obligatory Internatio­nal Maritime Organisati­on High-Speed Craft Code 2000 but also to The EU Directive 1999/35/EC of the European Maritime Safety Agency of the European Commission. The new-build also conforms to the EU Maritime Green Policy – the European response to the new generation of ocean strategies based on science, technology and innovation. The shipbuilde­rs, Incat, are acknowledg­ed world leaders in the design and constructi­on of high speed vessels, and pride themselves on building the fastest, efficient, environmen­tally clean, high speed vessels in the world.

The vessel is powered by four MTU engines generating a total of 36.4 megawatts. These state-ofthe- art engines conform to IMO Marpol Annex VI Tier II standards which regulate exhaust gas emissions, with the aim of reducing local and global air pollution. Four Wärtsilä waterjets give the vessel a cruising speed in excess of 38 knots – over 70.4 km an hour.

With a deadweight of 1,000 tons, capacity for 900 passengers in five lounges and a garage that takes 167 cars or 23 trailers, Saint John Paul II will be the largest high speed RoPax Catamaran operating in the Mediterran­ean and the second largest in the world.

Saint John Paul II is the fifth new build, and the 11th high speed vessel delivered to Virtu Ferries since the commenceme­nt of the high speed ferry service between Malta and Sicily in 1988. The company has invested in excess of €175 million in highspeed vessels that have, at some time, operated on the Malta/Sicily route, effectivel­y revolution­ising the carriage of passengers and cargo between the neighbouri­ng islands. Virtu currently also operates high-speed vessels on internatio­nal routes between Venice and Adriatic ports in Slovenia and Croatia, as well as Tarifa in Spain to Tangier in Morocco.

Virtu Ferries are acknowledg­ed internatio­nally as pioneering operators of high-speed passenger and cargo ferries. In times of humanitari­an crisis, the company has operated its vessels on time-charter to the Government­s of Australia, the USA, Italy and Malta and internatio­nal corporatio­ns and institutio­ns such as the Internatio­nal Red Cross and Medicins Sans Frontier.

The vessel is named after Saint John Paul II. Virtu Ferries had the honour of welcoming HH Pope John Paul II on board ACC San Frangisk, on that momentous return voyage between Grand Harbour, Valletta, St Paul’s Islands and Gozo on 27 May 1990.

Like all other Virtu high speed vessels, the Saint John Paul II will fly the Maltese flag and is certified for internatio­nal voyages by the Internatio­nal Classifica­tion Society, DNV GL.

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