Name Boston Port of registry København Completed May 2006 | Operator Maersk Yard number 459 Length 294 m | |
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Notes Call sign OZDB2IMO number 9313905MMSI 219216000 |
MV Boston is the first of the Maersk B-class of fast container ships. Originally called the "Maersk Boston", her name was changed in September 2010, to reflect her charter to MSC.
Contents

She has capacity for approximately 4,000 containers. Designed for rapid transportation between China and the USA, she has never operated on the route. Along with four of her sister ships, she was laid up in Loch Striven, Clyde.

Design

Designed for high speed transportation between China and USA, Boston is 294 m (965 ft) long, with a beam of 32 m (105 ft) and a draft of 13 m (43 ft). She can operate at 29 knots.
Operated by a crew of 20, the vessel has a gymnasium and hospital.
History

Mærsk Boston was the first of a series of seven fast container ships built by Volkswerft in Germany for Maersk. Launched in 2006, MV Boston is registered in København. A downturn in world economy means that the B-class vessels have never operated their intended route. Designed for a service speed of 29 kn, their fuel consumption (300 tonnes per day) makes them uneconomic. Reducing the operating speed to 12 kn, reduced fuel consumption to 50 tonnes per day. However the reduction in cargo being moved favours more economical vessels, such as Edith Mærsk.

Boston was rafted up in Loch Striven on the Clyde in Scotland, together with Mærsk Beaumont, Mærsk Bentonville and Mærsk Baltimore. After ten months, Boston left Loch Striven on 11 June 2010. Their older fleetmate, Sealand Performance left the raft on 21 May 2010. During the lay up, the raft was used to film a BBC children's TV show, Mission:2110, which premiered in May 2010.
Sister ships
