United European Car Carriers

United European Car Carriers (UECC) is a Norwegian roll-on/roll-off shipping line, created in 1990 and based in Oslo, Norway. The company primarily transports cargo on short sea routes within Europe.

United European Car Carriers
IndustryTransport
Founded1990
HeadquartersOslo
Number of employees
350
Websitewww.uecc.com


History

The company had its roots in Ugland-Aall Car Carriers (UACC), established in the 1970s. Johan Benad Ugland was a shareholder in the group. In 1990, its commercial operations and fleet of 19 vessels were sold (and rebranded as United European Car Carriers) to focus together with Leif Höegh & Co, on Hoegh-Ugland Autoliners ("HUAL") as a deep sea Roll-on/roll-off carrier.
From 1990, UECC is jointly owned by Nippon Yusen Kaisha and Wallenius Lines, in a 50-50 share agreement.[1]

The main purpose of the acquisition was the plan to offer short sea service for Japanese automobile manufacturers that had manufacturing plants in Europe, along with improving the intra-Europe feeder network, by providing extensive connections to a number of destinations that could not be served by oceanic vessels due to physical or commercial limitations.[2]

UECC was the first roll-on/roll-off line to build and deploy a liquified natural gas-powered ship.[3] In 2016, the company took delivery of two dual fuel LNG pure car and truck carriers, Auto Eco and Auto Energy, of the 1A Super Finnish/Swedish ice class.[4] At that time, the vessels were the largest dual fuel vessels in the world, with a capacity of 4,000 cars each.[5]

Operations

UECC has 18 vessels that call at over 25 ports every week.[6] Its trade routes include Belgium-Germany to the Scandinavian and Baltic countries (including Russia), Mediterranean to Northern Europe (including Greece, Turkey, Italy), Spain[7] and France to UK and Netherlands.[8]

The main business is the domestic maritime transport and distribution of cargo such as automobiles, trucks, trailers, Mafi roll trailers, heavy construction machineries and further types of rolling freight.

The company is also active in terminal operations, controlling some of the on-shore activities, vehicles handling and storage facilities of ports such as Pasajes and Vigo in Spain, and Zeebrugge in Belgium.[9] Aside from its headquarters in Oslo, UECC also has four other branch offices in Madrid, Setubal, Odessa and Grimsby.[10]

gollark: Presumably which apartment in a building someone is in is available information to people configuring elevators there.
gollark: Sure it would. None are safe.
gollark: It would be boring and easy for those.
gollark: The elevator should just pick a floor at random then convince the passengers they need to go there.
gollark: Alternatively, have buttons, but instead of you pressing them it just uses a camera and gaze tracing to determine which you want.

References

  1. "Maritime News". www.marinelink.com.
  2. "UECC launches new service". www.shortsea.fr. 16 November 2010.
  3. "Maersk joins group monitoring ship emission compliance". www.joc.com.
  4. "UECC Launches Second Dual-Fuel LNG Car Carrier". World Maritime News. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  5. "World's first LNG-fuelled car carrier delivered to LR class - Lloyd's Register". www.lr.org.
  6. "UECC goes third battery hybrid LNG". Harbourmaster. 2 October 2019.
  7. "UECC launches short sea service - heavyliftpfi.com". www.heavyliftpfi.com.
  8. "New Atlantic service". www.shiptonorway.no. 27 February 2017.
  9. "Port of Zeebrugge invests in initiatives for clean ships". 3 January 2017.
  10. "UECC lays it back on the line". Automotivelogistics. 27 October 2017.

See also

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