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SuperCat used to have its own exclusive terminal and docking area in Calapan. This was built after the loss of SuperCat 1 , where sabotage was suspected. The terminal was eventually demolished after a bigger and better public terminal was opened for use in the second quarter of 2010.
It also is less than an hour's flight from Mactan–Cebu International Airport, which is a gateway to central Philippines for international tourists. Dubbed as the first eco-airport in the Philippines and the country's green gateway, the airport is located at a 230-hectare (570-acre) [5] site in Barangay Tawala in Panglao.
This page was last edited on 12 January 2023, at 04:08 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
On 26 August 2022, MV Asia Philippines, a RORO ferry owned by Trans-Asia Shipping Lines, but operated by Starlite Ferries at the time of the incident, caught fire around 5:30 p.m., a few meters off the Port of Batangas in Batangas City.
She plies the Cebu-Surigao route. M/V Filipinas Cagayan de Oro [10] IMO number: 9211743: Roll-On Lift-off Ferry 2000 2019 3122 85.76 m (281.4 ft) 14.60 m (47.9 ft) Built in 2000, she is the former M/V Ferry Toshima in Japan. It serves Cebu-Cagayan de Oro and Cagayan de Oro-Jagna (Bohol) route. M/V Filipinas Mindanao: IMO number: 9238143: Ferry 2001
Nino de Bohol. Lite Ferry 23: She was the fourth vessel acquired in 2010, and is considered unique being a catamaran RORO that looks like an LCT from the side. She is 57.5 meters long, and 16.0 meters wide, with gross tonnage of 496.88. Lite Ferry 25: IMO number: 9645528: She was acquired in 2012 from China, measuring 49.3 meters long and 13.8 ...
The company was not aggressive to expansion until 2001, when the company acquired their second vessel, M/V Oceanjet 2. In the same year, the company changed their name into Ocean Fast Ferries Corporation. They acquired 3 new ships from 2001 to 2003: the sister ships Oceanjet 3, Oceanjet 5 and Oceanjet 6, all built in Hong Kong. [2] OceanJet 288
Bohol–Panglao International Airport; C. Cebu–Bohol Bridge; U. Ubay Airport This page was last edited on 12 January 2023, at 04:08 ...