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Posted by Allen Newton
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17 March, 2026
“Currently Beverley is central to the complex construction of the offshore intake structure for desalination projects and will help shape sustainable infrastructure projects for years to come.
“In keeping with maritime tradition, Andre [Acciona chief operating officer] and I have named the vessel after our mother, Beverley. It’s a tribute that reflects both our family’s connection to the industry and the long‑standing custom of naming ships after women. It’s a proud moment for us and our family business.”
The release said Beverley was roughly the size of one and a half Olympic swimming pools, stood on 78‑metre legs and would install the ocean intake and outfall structures above the seabed.
These structures are to connect to the underground pipelines currently being bored by tunnel boring machines, eventually bringing seawater into the plant (intake) and returning the brine safely back to the ocean (outfall).
Two specialised jack‑up barges are being used to complete this work. The smaller support barge is to depart this month, while Beverley is to continue operations at the outfall location until marine works conclude in mid‑2026.
Beverley features an eight‑tonne‑per‑square‑metre deck load capacity, a 400‑tonne crane, a helideck and accommodation for more than 50 workers, enabling 24/7 operations to keep construction on schedule.
“The vessel's arrival marks the latest advancement in a project that will deliver 50 billion litres of drinking water to more than 2.5 million Western Australians as part of Stage 1, easing pressure on climate‑affected groundwater sources," the state government media release said.
“The ASDP is also providing strong economic benefits, supporting more than 1500 local jobs and injecting $1.1billion into the WA economy, including $65million in contracts awarded to Aboriginal businesses.
“With major tunnelling, pipeline and site works well advanced, the ASDP, being delivered under strict environmental conditions, remains on track to be fully operational by mid‑2028.”
