Shin Nihonkai Ferry
Marine transportation company in Japan
Native name | 新日本海フェリー株式会社 |
---|---|
Company type | Corporation |
Industry | Marine transportation |
Founded | June 11, 1967 (1967-06-11) |
Headquarters | Osaka , Japan |
Website | www |
Shin Nihonkai Ferry Co., Ltd. (新日本海フェリー株式会社, Shin Nihonkai Ferry Kabushiki-gaisha) is a marine transportation company based in Japan.
Shin Nihonkai Ferry collaborated with Mitsubishi Shipbuilding in demonstrating the first successful sea voyage using an unmanned, fully autonomous navigation system on January 17, 2022,[1] ferrying 240 kilometres, from Shinmoji in Northern Kyushu, to the Iyonada Sea, over seven hours, with a maximum speed of 26 knots.[2]
Ships and Routes
Highspeed Ferries
Ship | Built | Gross tonnage | Length | Width | Passengers | Trucks | Cars | Speed | Routes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hamanasu | 2004 | 16,810 | 224.5 m | 26.0 m | 746 | 158 | 66 | 31 | Maizuru - Otaru |
Akashia | 2004 | 16,810 | 224.5 m | 26.0 m | 746 | 158 | 66 | 31 | Maizuru - Otaru |
Suzuran (2nd Generation) | 2012 | 17,382 | 224.5 m | 26.0 m | 613 | 158 | 58 | 28 | Tsuruga - Tomakomai |
Suisen (2nd Generation) | 2012 | 17,382 | 224.5 m | 26.0 m | 613 | 158 | 58 | 28 | Tsuruga - Tomakomai |
Conventional Ferries
Ship | Built | Gross tonnage | Length | Width | Passengers | Trucks | Cars | Speed | Routes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lilac | 2002 | 18,229 | 199.9 m | 26.5 m | 846 | 146 | 58 | 23 | Tsuruga - Niigata - Akita - Tomakomai |
Yuukari | 2002 | 18,229 | 199.9 m | 26.5 m | 846 | 146 | 58 | 23 | Tsuruga - Niigata - Akita - Tomakomai |
Lavender | 2017 | 14,125 | 197.5 m | 26.7 m | 600 | 150 | 22 | 24 | Niigata - Otaru |
Azalea | 2017 | 14,125 | 197.5 m | 26.7 m | 600 | 150 | 22 | 24 | Niigata - Otaru |
Terminals
Shin Nihonkai Ferry operates from six terminals.[3]
- Maizuru ferry terminal
- Located in Maizuru, Kyoto (35°28′53″N 135°23′31″E / 35.4815°N 135.3919°E / 35.4815; 135.3919 (Shin Nihonkai Ferry Maizuru Terminal))
- Tsuruga ferry terminal
- Located in Tsuruga, Fukui (35°40′43″N 136°04′21″E / 35.6786°N 136.0725°E / 35.6786; 136.0725 (Shin Nihonkai Ferry Tsuruga Terminal))
- Niigata ferry terminal
- Located in Niigata, Niigata (37°56′17″N 139°04′13″E / 37.9381°N 139.0702°E / 37.9381; 139.0702 (Shin Nihonkai Ferry Niigata Terminal))
- Akita ferry terminal
- Located in Akita, Akita (39°45′18″N 140°03′31″E / 39.7551°N 140.0586°E / 39.7551; 140.0586 (Shin Nihonkai Ferry Akita Terminal))
- Tomakomai east ferry terminal
- Located in Atsuma, Hokkaido (42°36′33″N 141°49′09″E / 42.6092°N 141.8193°E / 42.6092; 141.8193 (Shin Nihonkai Ferry Tomakomai Terminal))
- Otaru ferry terminal
- Located in Otaru, Hokkaido (43°11′27″N 141°01′08″E / 43.1908°N 141.0188°E / 43.1908; 141.0188 (Shin Nihonkai Ferry Otaru Terminal))
References
- ^ Emir, Can (19 January 2022). "The World's First Autonomous Ship Just Finished Its First Run in Japan". interestingengineering.com. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
- ^ marinecurrents (22 January 2022). "MHI completed demonstration test of fully autonomous ship systems smoothly". MarineCurrents. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
- ^ "Terminal Access" (in Japanese). Shin Nihonkai Ferry. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shinnihonkai Ferry.
- Official website (in Japanese)
- v
- t
- e
Mass transit in Hokkaido
- Cassiopeia
- Hakuchō
- Hamanasu
- Ishikari
- Super Hakuchō
- Super White Arrow
- Twilight Express
- White Arrow
- Namboku Line
- Tōzai Line
- Tōhō Line
- Rail
- Airports
- Ports
- Hakodate
- Otaru
- Tomakomai
- Kushiro
- Heart Land Ferry (ja) (Wakkanai—N. Islands)
- Silver Ferry (Tomakomai—Hachinohe)
- Tsugaru Kaikyō Ferry (Hakodate—Aomori)
- Seikan Ferry (Hakodate—Aomori)
- Shin Nihonkai Ferry
- MOL Ferry
- Taiheiyō Ferry
- Haboro-Enkai Ferry (ja) (Haboro—Yagishiri Island)
- Cards
- Tunnels
- Japan transit: Tokyo
- Keihanshin
- Nagoya
- Fukuoka
- Hakone Fuji Izu
- Hokkaido
- Aomori
- Sendai
- Akita
- Niigata
- Toyama
- Nagano
- Okayama
- Hiroshima
- Shikoku
- Metro systems
- Shinkansen
- trams (list)
- aerial lifts (list)
This article about a Japanese corporation- or company-related topic is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e