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Meyer Neptun Engineering reveals expansion plans over coming monthsMeyer Neptun Engineering reveals expansion plans over coming months

Operations at Meyer Neptun Engineering are underway, with the company aiming to grow to 50 engineers in the months ahead.

Frederik Erdmann, German Correspondent

January 11, 2022

2 Min Read
CRUISE MNE startup
Meyer Neptun Engineering's team began operating at the start of the yearPHOTO: Meyer Neptun Engineering

Based at Neptun Werft in Warnemünde, the start-up comprised a team of eight at the beginning of the year. According to Meyer Neptun Engineering MD Manfred Müller-Fahrenholz, the company is attempting to attract additional engineers, or ‘talents who want to shape the shipping of the future with us.’ 10 vacancies are currently being advertised online.

The company's fresh team embarked on a familiarisation phase in early January, which is to include exchanges with existing engineering teams based at Papenburg.

It offers optimistic news for Germany’s shipbuilding industry, following the insolvencies of MV Werften and Lloyd Werft Bremerhaven. 

Shipbuilding veteran as MD 

The management team of Meyer Neptun comprises Müller-Fahrenholz together with Malte Poelmann, chief technology officer, Meyer Group.

One of Germany's most respected shipbuilding veterans, Müller-Fahrenholz has a 40-year history at Meyer.

He was appointed MD of Meyer-owned Neptun Werft on September 1, 2000 - a position he held for 16 years until his retirement. During his tenure, Müller-Fahrenholz turned Neptun into a market and innovation leader particularly in the river ship segment and his name is associated with significant initiatives, such as the longship design realized for Viking. The successful entry into the newbuilding market for domestic ferries, as well as the establishment of an engine section production, supplying such modules to Meyer Papenburg and Meyer Turku were other milestones. The Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Ministry of Economics appointed Müller-Fahrenholz its Ambassador of Economics in July 2018.  

Green technology

Representatives at Meyer Neptun Engineering describe it as a ‘competence centre for special ships,’ coinciding with district head of the IG Metall trade union, Daniel Friedrich’s comment that the German shipbuilding industry should focus on creating vessels that ‘no one else is able to construct’ and his suggestion that 'Germany should become a pioneer for emission-free ships.'

As part of its focus on climate-neutral propulsion, Meyer Neptun Engineering will research opportunities to retrofit existing fleets, research vessels and offshore facilities to become more sustainable.

Poelmann remarked that Rostock-Warnemünde was chosen as its venue due the maritime know-how of the region with a strong network of medium-sized partner companies, the proximity to the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, the University of Rostock and Neptun Werft.

Employees to shape company structure 

Poelmann went on explain the start-up's advantage at having Meyer Group in the background, which has projects already scheduled that will provide engineering work in the years to come. But, Meyer Neptun Engineering is taking new approaches, he added, which build on strong involvement from the team. ‘It is a start-up where the employees also help shape the structure of the company,’ he said.

About the Author

Frederik Erdmann

German Correspondent

Frederik Erdmann is Seatrade's German cruise correspondent since 2002. Following secondary school graduation he joined the port agency network, Sartori & Berger, on a vocational training program. After subsequent studies of Business Administration, Frederik Erdmann held various positions at Sartori & Berger until 2010. After a period of working with the Flensburg Chamber of Commerce, he was appointed Designated Person Safety/Security, Environment and Quality of the coastal ferry operator, Wyker Dampfschiffs-Reederei. As a maritime trade press correspondent and visiting lecturer of the Flensburg University of Applied Sciences,

Frederik Erdmann concentrates on ferry and cruise ship management, port development as well as safety and security in passenger shipping. He is also a member of the Flensburg Chamber of Commerce's Tourism Committee.

 

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