E-Crane prides itself in not only supplying equipment, but rather solutions for bulk material handling challenges. After delivery and installation, E-Crane personnel remains present on site to carry out operator and maintenance staff training, as this is a practice both client and supplier will benefit from. Additional training can also be organized at the E-Crane Academy in the E-Crane HQ in Belgium, for more in depth training courses. In the instance of Bayan Resources, E-Crane is also carrying out all maintenance activities for its client. An all-in maintenance contract is in place so that Bayan can focus on its core business: coal mining. Weekly site visits are made to support the client in the best possible way. E-Crane further assists in optimizing the unloading process by continued operator training, bottleneck identification, process evaluation and by making recommendations on how the terminal operations can be optimized as a whole. Furthermore, E-Crane is on standby 24/7 in case of emergencies and also guarantees the availability of replacement parts, should they be required. All of the above illustrates E-Crane’s commitment to being a
JUNE 2017
E-Crane Worldwide has been seeing a strong demand for its products, with a substantial number of cranes being used in the coal industry. Even though market conditions have not been very favourable over the last few years, E-Cranes still find their way to users around the world and in Southeast Asia (SEA) in particular. One of the main reasons is that E-Cranes help reduce the operational cost for their users while increasing the terminal reliability, so investments can still be justified A good example can be found in Indonesia where E-Crane has received a repeat order for two coal handling E-Cranes. These two additional 2000 Series E-Cranes are scheduled to be shipped to Balikpapan for Bayan Resources, less than two years after the successful commissioning of Bayan Resources’ first E-Crane. This 2000 Series E-Crane has been working near Kota Bangun on the Mahakam River in Central Kalimantan, unloading 180–230ft flat deck barges into a dedicated hopper feeding a barge loader since the end of 2015. ‘Through barge’ unloading rates of well over 1,500tph (metric tonnes per hour) have been accomplished, with further room for improvement.
ENGINEERING & EQUIPMENT
E-Crane sees continued growth in Southeast Asia
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