Job Offer

Marine Pilot


published on 13 July 2021 530 -

MCN Jobs
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vestibulum eget ante tristique, finibus tortor et, posuere quam. Duis purus risus, pharetra nec lacinia ut, vehicula et nisl. Etiam a ornare est. Mauris sit amet nisl vitae eros ornare fringilla. Donec ut vulputate nibh. Sed luctus auctor dui, non iaculis elit fringilla in. Duis quis magna tempor elit tristique sagittis ut in turpis. Mauris quis orci interdum, dictum erat nec, gravida nisi. Suspendisse vel lorem arcu.

Please log in to see the complete premium content article.
Register now to get free access to premium content and further features of Marine‑Pilots.com.

Interdum et malesuada fames ac ante ipsum primis in faucibus. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Maecenas accumsan ex lorem, ut consectetur tortor tempor vel. Integer lectus est, facilisis sit amet nisi ut, fringilla tincidunt ex. Fusce vulputate fringilla tortor, quis facilisis urna scelerisque id. Sed facilisis orci vel nibh euismod, et hendrerit ex fringilla. Integer pharetra erat a mattis volutpat. Proin aliquam leo in sem tincidunt, feugiat condimentum augue tristique. Donec ut vehicula sapien. Nam malesuada metus nec iaculis ultrices.

Fusce consectetur et lorem convallis commodo. Aliquam erat volutpat. Integer ultricies dui nisl, in sagittis nisi ultrices sed. Nulla commodo sapien sed ultrices varius. Ut metus mi, vestibulum id ultrices nec, auctor sit amet augue. Nulla interdum dui vitae malesuada interdum. Ut in euismod massa.

Aliquam erat volutpat. Donec laoreet vel leo sit amet posuere. Quisque a tincidunt metus. Ut et diam aliquam, commodo lorem id, feugiat leo. Ut maximus purus tortor, a tincidunt diam fermentum ut. Vivamus et risus nulla. Maecenas vulputate vehicula tellus non finibus. In condimentum, erat at hendrerit elementum, nulla ligula tincidunt tellus, et porttitor diam tellus id elit. Praesent nec lectus sed risus venenatis euismod ut sed mi. Phasellus aliquam nulla vel pharetra auctor.

Vestibulum pretium, diam vitae gravida faucibus, risus neque bibendum sapien, ut rutrum nunc magna id velit. Etiam libero diam, ullamcorper sed lobortis vitae, elementum sed libero. Nunc vitae lectus cursus, tempor metus sit amet, vestibulum dolor. Interdum et malesuada fames ac ante ipsum primis in faucibus. Phasellus egestas ac lacus vel vestibulum. In tincidunt nec arcu nec finibus. Mauris convallis, dolor vitae facilisis accumsan, nulla sapien auctor arcu, eu efficitur elit velit vel augue. Etiam maximus finibus vestibulum. Fusce venenatis nibh vel eros laoreet lobortis. Fusce scelerisque eget justo et scelerisque.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vestibulum eget ante tristique, finibus tortor et, posuere quam. Duis purus risus, pharetra nec lacinia ut, vehicula et nisl. Etiam a ornare est. Mauris sit amet nisl vitae eros ornare fringilla. Donec ut vulputate nibh. Sed luctus auctor dui, non iaculis elit fringilla in. Duis quis magna tempor elit tristique sagittis ut in turpis. Mauris quis orci interdum, dictum erat nec, gravida nisi. Suspendisse vel lorem arcu.

Interdum et malesuada fames ac ante ipsum primis in faucibus. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Maecenas accumsan ex lorem, ut consectetur tortor tempor vel. Integer lectus est, facilisis sit amet nisi ut, fringilla tincidunt ex. Fusce vulputate fringilla tortor, quis facilisis urna scelerisque id. Sed facilisis orci vel nibh euismod, et hendrerit ex fringilla. Integer pharetra erat a mattis volutpat. Proin aliquam leo in sem tincidunt, feugiat condimentum augue tristique. Donec ut vehicula sapien. Nam malesuada metus nec iaculis ultrices.

Read more...

Article New thinking bolsters marine pilot team in New Zealand

by Port Taranaki Duty Pilot - published on 3 September 2024

An innovative approach to marine pilotage recruitment and training has increased the breadth of skills and knowledge in our marine team and set us up for the long term.

0

Video How seafarers are helped to pilot autonomous vessels?

published on 30 June 2021

More on the power of Simulation and Training: https://pages.wartsila.digital/simulation-and-training-yt
ISTLAB photos by SAMK / Pekka Lehmuskallio

0

Article Mauritania - Precautions to take during calls at the port of Nouakchott

published on 24 January 2023

The seaport of Nouakchott, Mauritania, is experiencing problems related to wind and swell, risks of grounding due to unreliable berth depths, harbour infrastructure damage claims, an acceptance of the vessel's draught survey figures and shortage claims.

1

Article Scary 30m (98.4ft) Wave Off Irelands West Coast Yesterday

by Marine-Pilots.com - published on 29 October 2020

A monster wave of 30m was measured at 03:00 am by the Marine Institute M6 buoy located 200nm West of Ireland.

1

Video Pilot Boat Draco (Netherlands)

published on 10 October 2022

0

Video Thomas Levillain, Marine Pilot at Pilotage de la Seine, France

published on 10 December 2021

Campagne de prévention "LA SÉCURITÉ DES MARINS, TOUS ACTEURS, TOUS GAGNANTS". Témoignage de Thomas Levillain, pilote à la station de pilotage de la Seine au Havre.

0

Article Colombo Dockyard Delivers The Third Pilot Launch Built for Sri Lanka Ports Authority

published on 24 February 2021

On 22nd February 2021, Colombo Dockyard PLC (CDPLC) delivered a Pilot Launch, the third Pilot Launch, as per an Agreement signed with Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) on 1st February 2019.

1

Article Hybrid-electric Pilot Boat Delivered in Singapore

published on 9 April 2021

Penguin International Limited has delivered Singapore’s first hybrid-powered ship - a 15-metre, 12-pax aluminium pilot boat christened "Penguin Tenaga".

0

Opinion Pilot transfer arrangements - Sharing knowledge matters – but problems go beyond non-compliance to SOLAS itself

by Kevin Vallance deep sea pilot and author - published on 23 September 2020

Like many seafarers I have long been a keen follower of The Nautical Institute’s MARS programme, and along with many other members I listened to the recent webinar on that topic. One theme which was repeated more than once was that it is better to learn from someone else’s misfortune rather than have it happen to you. Having personally been involved in two near misses resulting from unsafe pilot transfer arrangements in a relatively short space of time, I asked how experiences and knowledge specifically about pilot ladder safety could best be promulgated to avoid repeating common accidents or near misses.

1