Thursday, April 28, 2011
BAE to showcase ship repair
HOUSTON - BAE Systems will showcase its ship repair capabilities at the 2011 Offshore Technology Conference May 2-5 in Houston. With more than 5,000 workers, BAE Systems does drydock and pierside repairs and in maintenance, overhaul and conversion of commercial and military vessels. It has six full-service shipyards, including the 423-acre site in Mobile, Ala., and a satellite ship repair facility in Moss Point, Miss. (Source: Business Wire, 04/28/11)
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Huntington Ingalls names shipyard chiefs
PASCAGOULA, Miss. - Huntington Ingalls Industries Inc., owner of Pascagoula’s 10,800-employee shipyard, said its board of directors approved Irwin F. Edenzon and Matthew J. Mulherin as corporate vice presidents and presidents of the company’s two major shipyards. Edenzon was named president of Ingalls Shipbuilding and Mulherin became president of Newport News Shipbuilding in Virginia. HII, previously the shipbuilding division of Northrop Grumman Corp., began operating on March 31 as an independent, publicly traded company. (Source: Mississippi Press, 04/26/11)
Saturday, April 23, 2011
GCRL's Hawkins to retire
OCEAN SPRINGS, Miss. - Long-time Gulf Coast Research Laboratory director Bill Hawkins plans to retire at the end of June. Hawkins has served as director since early 2008 and was executive director for six years before that. Hawkins, 64, is the seventh GCRL director. During his tenure GCRL has grown. The number of buildings on the 224-acre Cedar Point site has nearly doubled, and there are 15 buildings on the 50-acre Halstead campus. (Source: Mississippi Press, 04/23/11)
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Nebula used in ecosystem project
NASA is moving ahead with its work on the Nebula cloud-computing platform even after the departure of the technology's creator. The agency's John C. Stennis Space Center, Miss., recently used the cloud-computing infrastructure to process data for an environmental project aimed at boosting the health of the ecosystem in the Gulf of Mexico. The center's Applied Science and Technology Project Office has been using the results of NASA Earth Science research to address issues identified by the Gulf of Mexico Alliance, a partnership of five states. The group is collaborating to improve both the ecological and economic health of the Gulf region, which sustained a major blow last year with the Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster. (Source: Information Week, 04/19/11)
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Last of federal waters opened
NOAA on Tuesday reopened 1,041 square miles of the Gulf of Mexico to commercial and recreational fishing. It's the area immediately surrounding the Deepwater Horizon wellhead, east of Louisiana. This is the twelfth and final reopening in federal waters since July 22, and opens all of the areas in federal waters formerly closed to fishing due to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. (Source: Sun Herald, 04/19/11) April 20 marks the one-year anniversary of the explosion of the well, which killed 11 workers and spewed oil in the Gulf for three months.
Saturday, April 16, 2011
BAE to provide LCS guns, coms
BAE Systems will provide the external communications and primary gun systems for 10 littoral combat ships to be built by Austal USA of Mobile, Ala. BAE, which runs a shipyard in Mobile, will build the 57-mm gun systems used to defend against aerial, surface or ground threats. BAE will also be building radio and antenna systems and other types of specialized equipment and hardware for ship communications. The work will be done at BAE facilities in California, Maryland, Kentucky, Minnesota and Sweden. (Source: Mobile Press-Register, 04/15/11) Gulf Coast note: BAE Systems also has operations in Gautier, Miss., and Fort Walton Beach, Fla.
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Sea grass being examined
MOSS POINT, Miss. - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientists on Wednesday began examining sea grasses growing within the Grand Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve to identify any damage done by vessels deploying protective boom in response to last year's BP oil spill. The experts want their work to be done before the June 1 start of the Atlantic hurricane season. (Source: Mississippi Press, 04/14/11)
Command's deputy leaving
STENNIS SPACE CENTER, Miss. - The deputy director of the Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command is leaving to take a job with NATO in Italy, the command announced. Edward C. Gough Jr. is taking a post as senior principal scientist at the NATO Undersea Research Center in La Spezia, Italy. Gough, who also is the technical director, joined the command in 2003. (Source: Sun Herald, 04/13/11)
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
NOAA official: Gulf seafood safe
PASCAGOULA, Miss. – A NOAA Fisheries official told reporters that "not one piece of tainted seafood has entered the market" related to the April 2010 BP oil spill. Eric Schwaab, assistant administrator, lead a tour of the testing labs in Pascagoula to show the media the methods used to ensure Gulf seafood is safe: smell tests and chemical analysis. Schwaab said the unequivocal results are that any traces of oil in more than 40 species of marine life is 100 to 1,000 times below the level of concern, the level being set by a team of scientist from the FDA, NOAA, the EPA and five Gulf states. (Source: Sun Herald, 04/12/11)
Monday, April 11, 2011
Research lab holds first Earth Day
OCEAN SPRINGS, Miss. – The Gulf Coast Research Laboratory has been a participant in Earth Day celebrations before, but for the first time it will host a daylong event. The local event had been organized through Gulf Islands National Seashore, but they have discontinued offering Earth Day events so the Ocean Springs lab is taking over. Events Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., include a mix of activities from kayaking, pontoon boat rides, trawling trips to lectures by research scientists. (Source: Mississippi Press, 04/11/11)
Friday, April 8, 2011
BAE eyes more workers
MOBILE, Ala. - The Mobile facility of BAE Systems Southeast Shipyards will add up to 400 workers to finish building an oil tanker, a company official said. The shipyard on the east bank of Mobile River has 600 workers and another 200 to 250 contractors. The extra workforce is needed to finish a tanker for Mid-Ocean Tanker Co. LLC of South Norwalk, Conn. (Source: Mobile Press-Register, 04/07/11)
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
More ship contracts being negotiated
PASCAGOULA, Miss. - Huntington Ingalls Industries CEO Mike Petters told Jackson County leaders today that Friday's $1.5 billion ship contract is just the first of five the company is negotiating with the Navy over the next two years. HII separated from Northrop Grumman March 31 and now trades on the New York Stock Exchange. (Source: Sun Herald, 04/05/11)
Friday, April 1, 2011
Contract: Huntington Ingalls, $1.5B
Huntington Ingalls Industries Inc. of Pascagoula, Miss., a wholly owned subsidiary of Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding, is being awarded a $1,496,200,000 fixed-price-incentive modification to previously awarded contract for the procurement of the detail design and construction of LPD 26, the future USS John P. Murtha, 10th ship in the LPD 17 amphibious transport dock ship class. Work will be performed in Pascagoula, (82 percent); Crozet, Va. (4 percent); Beloit, Wis. (2 percent); and New Orleans, La. (1 percent). Other efforts will be performed at various sites throughout the United States (11 percent). Work is expected to be completed by February 2016. The Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, D.C., is the contracting activity. (Source: DoD, 04/01/11)
Austal breaks ground on expansion
MOBILE, Ala. - Austal USA broke ground Thursday on a $116 million project to build three new facilities at its Mobile River complex. The construction should be finished within 15 months. It will allow the shipbuilder to hire another 2,000 workers and complete contracts to build joint high-speed vessels and littoral combat ships. Austal employs about 2,000 people in Mobile. (Source: Mobile Press-Register, 03/31/11)
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