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DFDS Seaways is a Danish shipping company that operates passenger and freight services across northern Europe. Following the acquisition of Norfolkline in 2010, DFDS restructured its other shipping divisions ( DFDS Tor Line and DFDS Lisco) into the previously passenger-only operation of DFDS Seaways.
DFDS: Industrials: Large cap: ... Scandinavian Brake Systems ... Danish Scandinavian Investment Group: Industrials: Small cap: Danish Scandinavian Tobacco Group ...
In 2006 she was sold to DFDS Seaways [7] for use on the IJmuiden, Netherlands to Newcastle, England route as MS Princess of Norway. In 2011 she was renamed Princess Seaways . MS Olau Hollandia (1989) was the third of the vessels and built by Schichau Seebeckwerft for TT-Line's sister company Olau Line to a modified design.
DFDS Seaways is the shipping division of DFDS A/S operating a network of 25 shipping routes with 50 freight and passenger ships on the North Sea, Baltic Sea, and the English Channel. DFDS Logistics operates land transport and logistics activities including the former DFDS Lys Line and DFDS Container Line.
MS Moby Dada is a cruiseferry operated by Moby Lines, under charter from DFDS Seaways. She was built in 1981 as Finlandia for Effoa at Wärtsilä's Perno shipyard in Turku, Finland, and placed in service on Silja Line's Helsinki—Stockholm service. In 1990 she was sold to DFDS Seaways and renamed Queen of Scandinavia.
As demand for vehicle-carrying services grew, larger vessels were required for the route and the Winston Churchill was transferred to the River Tyne in 1978, for the twice-weekly service to Gothenburg, following the arrival of the new DFDS vessel MS Dana Anglia on the Harwich route. The ferry ran aground on August 27, 1979 off the Swedish coast.
MS Princess Seaways is a cruiseferry operated and owned by the Danish shipping company DFDS Seaways on a route connecting North Shields, England, to IJmuiden in the Netherlands. She was built in 1986 as Peter Pan by Seebeckwerft , Bremerhaven , Germany for TT-Line .
In October 2006 DFDS decided to drop the stop at Helsingborg in order to save fuel and pilot expenses. On 17 November 2010, a fire broke out in the car-deck of the ferry while en route from Oslo to Copenhagen. [6] [7] After a re-fit following the fire she was painted in DFDS new livery and renamed MS Pearl Seaways.