Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Malaccamax

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Tonnage
  
300,000 DWT

Beam
  
60 m (197 ft)

Length
  
333 m (1,093 ft)

Draft
  
20.5 m (67 ft)

Malaccamax wwwmarineinsightcomwpcontentuploads201210M

Malaccamax is a naval architecture term for the largest size of ship capable of fitting through the 25-metre-deep (82 ft) Strait of Malacca. Bulk carriers and supertankers have been built to this size, and the term is chosen for very large crude carriers (VLCC). They can transport oil from Arabia to China. A typical Malaccamax tanker can have a maximum length of 333 m (1,093 ft), beam of 60 m (197 ft), draught of 20.5 m (67.3 ft), and tonnage of 300,000 DWT.

Similar terms Panamax, Suezmax and Seawaymax are used for the largest ships capable of fitting through the Panama Canal, the Suez Canal and Saint Lawrence Seaway, respectively. Aframax tankers are those with a deadweight tonnage of 80,000 to 120,000.

Problems

Malaccamax NKK Monthly Release September 2002

Some Chinamax and most Capesize and very large crude carriers cannot pass this strait. Ships such as Suezmax and Neopanamax can pass. Any post-Malaccamax ship would need to use even longer alternate routes because traditional seaways such as the Sunda Strait, between the Indonesian islands of Java and Sumatra would become too shallow for large ships. Other routes would therefore be required:

Malaccamax Malaccamax Wikipedia

  • Lombok Strait, Makassar Strait, Sibutu Passage and Mindoro Strait
  • Ombai Strait, Banda Sea, Lifamatola Strait between the Sula Islands and Obi Islands, and Molucca Sea
  • around Australia
  • Artificially excavated new routes might also be a possibility:

  • deepening the Strait of Malacca, specifically at its minimum depth in the Singapore Strait,
  • the proposed Kra Canal, which however would take much more excavation.
  • References

    Malaccamax Wikipedia