Survitec awarded for contributions to maritime safety
Survival technology solutions provider Survitec has been hailed by a Liverpool charity for its contributions towards maritime safety.
The Liverpool Shipwreck and Humane Society (LS&HS) awarded Survitec its inaugural MV Derbyshire Award for the firm’s Seahaven Advanced Evacuation Systems (AES). The award celebrates individuals, companies or organisations that have contributed to maritime safety in the northwest of England region.
LS&HS presented the award to Stew Gregory, the lead designer of Seahaven, at Survitec’s facility in Birkenhead, UK. Seahaven is said to be the world’s largest inflatable lifeboat, designed to evacuate up to 1,060 passengers in under 22 minutes while providing up to 85 per cent additional deck space for cruise ship owners and operators to generate revenue.
Tony Jones, chair of the LS&HS, says: “The MV Derbyshire Award reflects the focus of the Derbyshire families, and Survitec’s Seahaven was chosen as the winner of the 2022 MV Derbyshire Award as it encompasses all that is important in developing solutions for safety at sea.”
The judges felt that Seahaven’s technology, including launching at the push of a button, deploying in under four minutes and travelling independently for 24 hours, was innovative and redefined the previously held concepts of maritime safety, especially for mass evacuation. It is also a hugely visible and significant statement of the importance of saving lives at sea.
Jones adds: “This pioneering approach to maritime safety reflects the values of the LS&HS, as it pushes the boundaries of life-saving.”
After receiving the award, Gregory said: “Over the past 100 years, Survitec has demonstrated a commitment to innovation, investment and development of Survival Technology for those who rely on and depend on it. We are extremely pleased to collect this award from the Liverpool Shipwreck and Humane Society in recognition of Survitec’s sole purpose. We exist to protect lives.”
This inaugural annual award for maritime safety is named after the MV Derbyshire, a Liverpool ship that was tragically lost on 9 September 1980 during Typhoon Orchid, south of Japan. It was the largest British ship to have been lost at sea, with the deaths of 42 crew members and two wives. For decades, the MV Derbyshire families focused not just on justice for their loved ones, but on the wider issues of maritime standards and safety, seeking to ensure that no more innocent lives are lost at sea.
England’s northwest region has been long renowned for both its shipping history and also its maritime innovation, and now the Liverpool Shipwreck and Humane Society, formed in 1839, has launched this award for which nominations will open again in June 2023.
In October, MIN reported that Survitec had appointed Robert Steen Kledal as the company’s new chief executive officer.