A ship-shape bag-in-box system

The Golden Alaska fishing vessel boasts a labor-saving case erector and bag inserter.

NET SAVINGS. The tandem of case erector (above) and bag inserter (top) have reduced the crew requirements by several people per
NET SAVINGS. The tandem of case erector (above) and bag inserter (top) have reduced the crew requirements by several people per

The 305-ft, 3,705-gross-ton namesake fishing vessel of Golden Alaska LLC, Seattle, WA, operates with a crew of 132 and two packaging machines. The packaging machines were added in 2008 as part of a multimillion-dollar conversion and modernization investment. Along with new fish processing equipment, the improvements included an on-board bag-in-box packaging system manufactured by Pearson Packaging Systems (www.pearsonpkg.com). The system comprises a case erector and a bag inserter, a tandem that permits the packaging operations to be conducted onboard, with the automated equipment providing a major assist to a busy crew. According to company VP of operations Larry Levien, the idea behind the four-plus-months’-long upgrade project that was competed in July included labor savings for the vessel’s manual packaging operations.

“The major benefit is that it cuts down on the number of operators needed,” he says. That amounts to several persons per shift for the around-the-clock operations. The space and labor savings is especially crucial onboard a ship, where every bunk counts.

The supplier and integrator for the upgrade project was Carnitech (www.carnitech.com), which recently became part of Marel (www.marel.com).

A sea change

The improvement project corresponds to a sea change in which the Golden Alaska converted much of its surimi capability over to fish fillets. That was a strategic decision that improves recoveries to help offset a drop in quotas, Levien explains. “It takes a lot less fish to produce the same amount of finished product,” he points out.

That change played perfectly into the ship’s expansion plans for automatic packaging capability. “We picked up the packaging space from the area that had been devoted to surimi additives and associated material,” Levien says. “It’s unusual for a ship to have room for something as large as packaging machinery, but with this available space we were able to do that. It worked out.”

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