SIU-contracted Alaska Tanker Company (ATC) continues to help set the worldwide standard for excellence in shipboard safety and environmental performance in the maritime tanker industry.
The Beaverton, Ore.-based business recently added yet another signpost to its already impressive list of accomplishments when it registered 10 million man hours without a lost-time injury. This latest milestone covers five years of operations throughout the company’s SIU-crewed fleet and recognizes ATC’s achieving the highest levels of safety and environmental performance while transporting Alaska North Slope crude oil from Valdez, Alaska to refineries in Washington State, California and Hawaii.
ATC operates six Seafarers-crewed vessels including the four new Alaska Class tankers built in San Diego: the Alaskan Legend, Alaskan Frontier, Alaskan Explorer and Alaskan Navigator, along with the Denali and the Prince William Sound.
ATC President and CEO Anil Mathur credited the SIU for substantially contributing to the company’s outstanding safety record. “Our relationship with the Seafarers International Union has been crucial to our joint success,” he said. “The SIU leadership has an enlightened and long-term view of what is best for their membership. This view matches our view in ATC. We both see safety as deeply personal and not about statistics. Safety is about taking care of ourselves every day, so we can live full lives and earn a good living for our loved ones. Our seafarers have responded with maturity and responsibility to the work environment we have jointly created. The world-class achievement of completing 10 million man hours without a lost-time injury truly belongs to the workforce. It has been made possible by the core values we all share.”
SIU Executive Vice President Augie Tellez said the latest milestone “very clearly should not be taken for granted. Ten million man hours without a lost-time injury is a great achievement—one that reflects well on the SIU members who crew their ships, the safety training that many of them have received at the Paul Hall Center, and of course the company. No pun intended, this kind of record doesn’t happen by accident—it happens because we all share a real commitment to safety, and we work together to reach our goals.”
Last year, the Alaska State Legislature honored ATC for its consistently outstanding record, presenting a declaration commending the company for its safety-related efforts and achievements. The declaration noted that since 2002 (and as of last summer, when it was presented), ATC ships safely carried 43.6 billion gallons of crude oil with just 27.2 gallons of hydraulic oil escaping to the sea (as a consequence of storm damage).
The United States Coast Guard recognized ATC’s outstanding performance in 2004 when the company was awarded the Benkert “Osprey” Gold Award. In 2003, ATC earned a major Washington state award for excellence in marine safety and environmental stewardship.
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