Boluda Towage – one of the divisions of Boluda Corporación Marítima that focuses its activity on port, coastal, and offshore towage, as well as maritime salvage – acquires the towage company Resolve Salvage and Fire (Gibraltar) Limited

Boluda strengthens its global leadership in the maritime industry

With this acquisition, Boluda Towage continues its expansion process in the international market strengthening its presence in a strategic point for maritime transport such as the Strait of Gibraltar, the gateway from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean via the Mediterranean Sea.

Resolve Salvage and Fire Limited , owned by Resolve Marine Group, is a company with decades of experience in towing and marine salvage services for all types of vessels as well as in engineering and maintenance projects for marine installations and constructions.

This incorporation will not only be fruitful for both parties, but especially for Boluda Towage’s customers, who will have a wider range of services and a greater capacity for intervention.

Boluda Towage has been operating for many years on both sides of the strait; in Cadiz, Algeciras, and Gibraltar – on the European side – and in Ceuta and Tangier – on the North African coast – assisting with manoeuvres in all these important ports.

With this acquisition, Boluda Towage adds the tugs Elliot, Hercules, Rooke, and Wellington to its extensive global fleet, increasing its service and support potential and capacity in the Strait. 

Boluda Towage, aware of its responsibility and sustainable commitment, is strengthening its activities despite global geopolitical tensions. Following the latest events in the Red Sea, the ports in the Strait of Gibraltar will be the first in Europe to be touched by the shipping lines now sailing the Cape of Good Hope route and will be a key point on the trade routes between Europe and Asia.

The Strait of Gibraltar, with a length of 42 miles and a width at its narrowest point of only nine miles, is one of the areas with the highest density of navigation in the world, through which more than 100,000 ships pass each year, more than 10% of the total world traffic. The conditions in the area, with strong and variable tides, powerful easterly and westerly winds, and frequent fog banks due to the high temperatures, make the work of the tugboats essential for the optimization of operations.