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Trasmediterránea

Trasmediterránea operates passengers and cargo ferries between mainland Spain and the Canary Islands, the Balearic Islands, and northern Africa's Spanish territories. Since 2017 the majority of the company belongs to Naviera Armas.

Compañia Trasmediterránea S.A.
Founded1916
HeadquartersMadrid, Spain
Area served
Balearic Islands, Spain, Algeria, Morocco, Canary Islands
ServicesPassenger transportation, Freight transportation
Websitewww.trasmediterranea.es

History edit

The Trasmediterránea ("cross-mediterranean") company was constituted on November 26, 1916, with the fusion of the companies of shipowners José Juan Dómine, Vicente Ferrer, Joaquín Tintoré and Enrique García, though it didn't start operating until January 1 of following year. It was headquartered in Barcelona and had a fleet of 45 ships.

During the Spanish Civil War, its ships were used as auxiliary navy ships by both sides of the conflict, the Spanish Republican Navy and the Nationalist faction.

In 1978, it became a state-owned company, until it was privatized by the PP government in 2002. The SEPI sold the company to a consortium that consisted of Acciona Logística (60%), Caja de Ahorros del Mediterráneo, Compañía de Remolcadores Ibaizábal, Agrupación Hotelera Dóliga, Suministros Ibiza and Naviera Armas. Later, the company changed its name to Acciona-Trasmediterranea. Currently it operates a fleet of 25 ships and is headquartered in Madrid.

From 1921 to 1998, when the sector was liberalized, it had the monopoly on the lines that linked the mainland Spain with the islands and northern Africa. Today, even as it has lost its monopoly and has competition, Trasmediterránea is still leader in its sector.

At the end of October 2017, Acciona group agreed to sell its 92.7% stake in Trasmediterránea to Naviera Armas, another Spanish shipping company operating ferries mainly in the Canary Islands. The deal, pending approval by Spanish authorities, was expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2018.[1]

Company activity edit

 
Map of the Balearic Islands
 
Annotated satellite view of the Strait of Gibraltar

Trasmediterránea has its own maritime stations in Barcelona, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and Valencia. The company's activity is structured in four zones:

Fleet edit

Current edit

 
Milenium
 
Juan J. Sister
 
Ciudad de Málaga, at Tánger

As of 2018, Trasmediterránea owns and operates a large fleet of vessels, comprising 25 roro ferries, 1 high speed monohull and 3 high speed catamarans.[citation needed]

Name Built Enterered service Notes
Alborán 1999 2001
Almariya 1981 2013
Ciudad Autónoma Melilla 2001 2001
Ciudad de Granada 2001 2001
Ciudad de Ibiza 2003 2003
Ciudad de Málaga 1998 1998
José María Entrecanales 2010 2010
Juan J. Sister 1993 1993
Milenium Dos 2001 2003
Super-Fast Levante 2001 2001
Volcán de Tijarafe 2008 2018 Chartered from Naviera Armas
Volcán de Tinamar 2011 2018 Chartered from Naviera Armas
Volcán de Tirajana 2006 2006 Chartered to Naviera Armas

Former edit

  • Plus Ultra (1928–1977) Scrapped in Spain in 1977.
  • La Palma (1930–1976) As a museum ship in Tenerife, Spain since 1986.
  • Victoria (1952–1984) Scrapped in 1984.
  • Virgen De Africa (1953–1986) Scrapped in 1992.
  • Santa Maria De Las Nieves (1964–1982) Scrapped in 1992.
  • Juan March (1966–1985) As Ocean Majesty since 1995.
  • Santa Cruz De Tenerife (1966–1985) Scrapped in Aliaga, Turkey in 1987.
  • Ciudad De Compostela (1967–1992) Sank as Saray Star while en route from Piraeus to Venice in 1994.
  • Las Palmas De Gran Canaria (1967–1986) Scrapped as Royal Pacific at Taiwan in 2005.
  • Antonio Larazo (1968–1988) Scrapped as Logos II at Aliaga, Turkey in 2008.
  • Vicente Puchol (1969–1987) Scrapped as 7107 Island Cruise in Manila sometime in 2023/2024.
  • Isla De Menorca (1971–1984) Scrapped at Aliaga, Turkey in 2004.
  • J.J Sister (1975–1994) Scrapped at Aliaga, Turkey in 2005.
  • Manuel Solo (1976–1992) Scrapped at Aliaga, Turkey in 2013.
  • Ciudad De La Laguna (1975–1999) Scrapped in 2008.
  • Villa De Agaete (1975–2002) Scrapped at Alang India in 2008.
  • Canguro Bruno (1978–1982) Scrapped at Aliaga, Turkey in 2001.
  • Ciudad De Ceuta (1978–2001) Scrapped in 2001.
  • Ciudad De Zaragoza (1978–1999) Scrapped at Cadiz, Spain in 2000.
  • Ciudad De Badajoz (1979–2004) Scrapped as Nena at Alang, India in 2008.
  • Ciudad De Sevilla (1980–2009) Scrapped as Sevilla in 2010.
  • Ciudad De Santa Cruz De La Palma (1981–1998) Scrapped as Oriental Princess at Indonesia in 2014.
  • Ciudad De Palma (1981–1982) Scrapped as Samundhar Sikharam at Aliaga, Turkey in 2009.
  • Ciudad De Salamanca (1982–2007) Scrapped at Aliaga, Turkey in 2013.
  • Ciudad De Valencia (1984–2009) Scrapped as Mary The Queen at Manila, Philippines in 2016.
  • Bahia De Cadiz (1984–1985) Scrapped at Aliaga, Turkey in 2012.
  • Scirocco (1987–1992) Scrapped at Alang, India in 2009.
  • Marrajo (1989–2000) As Fiammeta M for Ustica Lines in 2000.
  • Ciudad De Burgos (1990–2007) Sank near Istanbul, Turkey in 2004 one person on board died and 20 are missing.
  • Cala Salada (1990–2000) As Mira since 2019.
  • Cala Fustan (1990–2000) As Amazon since 2014.
  • Princess Dacil (1990–2006) As Rocket 3 for a japanese company since 2006.
  • Santa De Cruz De Tenerife (1993–2012) as Seira for an Indonesian company since 2017.
  • Alcantara (1995–2012) as Royal Star since 2012.
  • Almundaina (1996–2008) as San Valentin since 2008.
  • Ciudad De Tanger (1998–2002) as Zadar for Jadrolinjia since 2004.
  • Super-Fast Andalucia (1999–2015) Scrapped as Eurocargo Trieste at Aliaga, Turkey in 2020.
  • Super-Fast Canarias (1999–2015) Scrapped as Eurpcargo Patrasso at Aliaga, Turkey in 2021.
  • Millenium (2000–2010) as Volcan De Teno for Naviera Armas since 2016.
  • Alyssa (2000–2001) as Optima Seaways for DFDS since 2012.
  • Murillo (2002–2014) as Cracovia for Polferries since 2017.
  • Almudaina Dos (2005–2022) as Santa Irini for a Greek company since 2022.
  • Zurbaran (2006–2019) as Isle Of Inisheer for Irish Ferries since 2019.
  • El Greco (2006–2007) as Finbo Cargo for Eckero Line since 2019.
  • Giulia D'Abundo (2007–2010) Scrapped as Abundo at Alang, India in 2010.
  • Vronskiy (2008–2021) Scrapped as Damla at Aliaga, Turkey in 2021.
  • Aegean Heaven (2008–2010) as Ayshe from 2014 to 2022. As DCL Qingdao since 2022.
  • Albayzin (2010–2019) as Venezia for Grimaldi Lines since 2019.
  • Tenacia (2011–2022) as Tenacia for Grandi Navi Veloci since 2022.
  • Audacia (2008–2011) as Rizhao Orient for a chinese company since 2014.
  • Sherbatiskiy (2013–2015) Scrapped as Sher at Alang, India in 2015.
  • Sorrento (2014–2015) A fire broke out when departure from Palma De Mallorca on 24 April 2015. The passengers survived. In 2016 the ship was scrapped at Aliaga, Turkey.
  • Snav Adriatico (2015–2017) as Snav Adriatico for Grandi Navi Veloci since 2017.
  • Forza (2016–2022) as Forza for Grandi Navi Veloci since 2022.
  • Dimonios (2017–2021) as Ciudad De Palma for Grimaldi Euromed since 2021.
  • Nura Nova (2017–2019) as Lady Carmela for Gestour since 2019.
  • Villa De Teror (2019–2020) as Madeleine II for C.T.M.A. since 2020.
  • Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (1993–2024) for Siremar since 2024

References edit

  1. ^ Naviera Armas Buys Trasmediterranea from Acciona. MarineLink, 26 October 2017. Retrieved 2018-02-02.

External links edit

  • Trasmediterránea official website
  • Acciona corporate website

trasmediterránea, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Trasmediterranea news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Trasmediterranea operates passengers and cargo ferries between mainland Spain and the Canary Islands the Balearic Islands and northern Africa s Spanish territories Since 2017 the majority of the company belongs to Naviera Armas Compania Trasmediterranea S A Founded1916HeadquartersMadrid SpainArea servedBalearic Islands Spain Algeria Morocco Canary IslandsServicesPassenger transportation Freight transportationWebsitewww trasmediterranea es Contents 1 History 2 Company activity 3 Fleet 3 1 Current 3 2 Former 4 References 5 External linksHistory editThe Trasmediterranea cross mediterranean company was constituted on November 26 1916 with the fusion of the companies of shipowners Jose Juan Domine Vicente Ferrer Joaquin Tintore and Enrique Garcia though it didn t start operating until January 1 of following year It was headquartered in Barcelona and had a fleet of 45 ships During the Spanish Civil War its ships were used as auxiliary navy ships by both sides of the conflict the Spanish Republican Navy and the Nationalist faction In 1978 it became a state owned company until it was privatized by the PP government in 2002 The SEPI sold the company to a consortium that consisted of Acciona Logistica 60 Caja de Ahorros del Mediterraneo Compania de Remolcadores Ibaizabal Agrupacion Hotelera Doliga Suministros Ibiza and Naviera Armas Later the company changed its name to Acciona Trasmediterranea Currently it operates a fleet of 25 ships and is headquartered in Madrid From 1921 to 1998 when the sector was liberalized it had the monopoly on the lines that linked the mainland Spain with the islands and northern Africa Today even as it has lost its monopoly and has competition Trasmediterranea is still leader in its sector At the end of October 2017 Acciona group agreed to sell its 92 7 stake in Trasmediterranea to Naviera Armas another Spanish shipping company operating ferries mainly in the Canary Islands The deal pending approval by Spanish authorities was expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2018 1 Company activity editThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Trasmediterranea news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message This section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available April 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Map of the Balearic Islands nbsp Annotated satellite view of the Strait of Gibraltar Trasmediterranea has its own maritime stations in Barcelona Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and Valencia The company s activity is structured in four zones Canarias Cadiz regular lines in both directions from Cadiz to Santa Cruz de Tenerife Las Palmas Santa Cruz de la Palma and Arrecife Arrecife to Cadiz Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and Puerto del Rosario Santa Cruz de la Palma to Arrecife Cadiz Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and Santa Cruz de Tenerife Santa Cruz de Tenerife to Arrecife Cadiz Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Morro Jable and Santa Cruz de la Palma Inter Canarian Las Palmas de Gran Canaria to Arrecife Morro Jable Puerto del Rosario Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Santa Cruz de la Palma Mainland Baleares regular lines in both directions from Barcelona to Palma de Mallorca Ibiza and Mahon Valencia to Palma de Mallorca Ibiza and Mahon Gandia to Palma de Mallorca and Ibiza South Strait regular lines in both directions from Algeciras to Ceuta and Tanger Morocco Almeria to Ghazaouet and Oran Algeria Melilla and Nador Morocco Malaga to Melilla United Kingdom Previously operated regular lines in both directions from Bilbao to Portsmouth service now discontinued Fleet editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Trasmediterranea news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Current edit nbsp Milenium nbsp Juan J Sister nbsp Ciudad de Malaga at Tanger As of 2018 Trasmediterranea owns and operates a large fleet of vessels comprising 25 roro ferries 1 high speed monohull and 3 high speed catamarans citation needed Name Built Enterered service Notes Alboran 1999 2001 Almariya 1981 2013 Ciudad Autonoma Melilla 2001 2001 Ciudad de Granada 2001 2001 Ciudad de Ibiza 2003 2003 Ciudad de Malaga 1998 1998 Jose Maria Entrecanales 2010 2010 Juan J Sister 1993 1993 Milenium Dos 2001 2003 Super Fast Levante 2001 2001 Volcan de Tijarafe 2008 2018 Chartered from Naviera Armas Volcan de Tinamar 2011 2018 Chartered from Naviera Armas Volcan de Tirajana 2006 2006 Chartered to Naviera Armas Former edit Plus Ultra 1928 1977 Scrapped in Spain in 1977 La Palma 1930 1976 As a museum ship in Tenerife Spain since 1986 Victoria 1952 1984 Scrapped in 1984 Virgen De Africa 1953 1986 Scrapped in 1992 Santa Maria De Las Nieves 1964 1982 Scrapped in 1992 Juan March 1966 1985 As Ocean Majesty since 1995 Santa Cruz De Tenerife 1966 1985 Scrapped in Aliaga Turkey in 1987 Ciudad De Compostela 1967 1992 Sank as Saray Star while en route from Piraeus to Venice in 1994 Las Palmas De Gran Canaria 1967 1986 Scrapped as Royal Pacific at Taiwan in 2005 Antonio Larazo 1968 1988 Scrapped as Logos II at Aliaga Turkey in 2008 Vicente Puchol 1969 1987 Scrapped as 7107 Island Cruise in Manila sometime in 2023 2024 Isla De Menorca 1971 1984 Scrapped at Aliaga Turkey in 2004 J J Sister 1975 1994 Scrapped at Aliaga Turkey in 2005 Manuel Solo 1976 1992 Scrapped at Aliaga Turkey in 2013 Ciudad De La Laguna 1975 1999 Scrapped in 2008 Villa De Agaete 1975 2002 Scrapped at Alang India in 2008 Canguro Bruno 1978 1982 Scrapped at Aliaga Turkey in 2001 Ciudad De Ceuta 1978 2001 Scrapped in 2001 Ciudad De Zaragoza 1978 1999 Scrapped at Cadiz Spain in 2000 Ciudad De Badajoz 1979 2004 Scrapped as Nena at Alang India in 2008 Ciudad De Sevilla 1980 2009 Scrapped as Sevilla in 2010 Ciudad De Santa Cruz De La Palma 1981 1998 Scrapped as Oriental Princess at Indonesia in 2014 Ciudad De Palma 1981 1982 Scrapped as Samundhar Sikharam at Aliaga Turkey in 2009 Ciudad De Salamanca 1982 2007 Scrapped at Aliaga Turkey in 2013 Ciudad De Valencia 1984 2009 Scrapped as Mary The Queen at Manila Philippines in 2016 Bahia De Cadiz 1984 1985 Scrapped at Aliaga Turkey in 2012 Scirocco 1987 1992 Scrapped at Alang India in 2009 Marrajo 1989 2000 As Fiammeta M for Ustica Lines in 2000 Ciudad De Burgos 1990 2007 Sank near Istanbul Turkey in 2004 one person on board died and 20 are missing Cala Salada 1990 2000 As Mira since 2019 Cala Fustan 1990 2000 As Amazon since 2014 Princess Dacil 1990 2006 As Rocket 3 for a japanese company since 2006 Santa De Cruz De Tenerife 1993 2012 as Seira for an Indonesian company since 2017 Alcantara 1995 2012 as Royal Star since 2012 Almundaina 1996 2008 as San Valentin since 2008 Ciudad De Tanger 1998 2002 as Zadar for Jadrolinjia since 2004 Super Fast Andalucia 1999 2015 Scrapped as Eurocargo Trieste at Aliaga Turkey in 2020 Super Fast Canarias 1999 2015 Scrapped as Eurpcargo Patrasso at Aliaga Turkey in 2021 Millenium 2000 2010 as Volcan De Teno for Naviera Armas since 2016 Alyssa 2000 2001 as Optima Seaways for DFDS since 2012 Murillo 2002 2014 as Cracovia for Polferries since 2017 Almudaina Dos 2005 2022 as Santa Irini for a Greek company since 2022 Zurbaran 2006 2019 as Isle Of Inisheer for Irish Ferries since 2019 El Greco 2006 2007 as Finbo Cargo for Eckero Line since 2019 Giulia D Abundo 2007 2010 Scrapped as Abundo at Alang India in 2010 Vronskiy 2008 2021 Scrapped as Damla at Aliaga Turkey in 2021 Aegean Heaven 2008 2010 as Ayshe from 2014 to 2022 As DCL Qingdao since 2022 Albayzin 2010 2019 as Venezia for Grimaldi Lines since 2019 Tenacia 2011 2022 as Tenacia for Grandi Navi Veloci since 2022 Audacia 2008 2011 as Rizhao Orient for a chinese company since 2014 Sherbatiskiy 2013 2015 Scrapped as Sher at Alang India in 2015 Sorrento 2014 2015 A fire broke out when departure from Palma De Mallorca on 24 April 2015 The passengers survived In 2016 the ship was scrapped at Aliaga Turkey Snav Adriatico 2015 2017 as Snav Adriatico for Grandi Navi Veloci since 2017 Forza 2016 2022 as Forza for Grandi Navi Veloci since 2022 Dimonios 2017 2021 as Ciudad De Palma for Grimaldi Euromed since 2021 Nura Nova 2017 2019 as Lady Carmela for Gestour since 2019 Villa De Teror 2019 2020 as Madeleine II for C T M A since 2020 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria 1993 2024 for Siremar since 2024References edit Naviera Armas Buys Trasmediterranea from Acciona MarineLink 26 October 2017 Retrieved 2018 02 02 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trasmediterranea Trasmediterranea official website Acciona corporate website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trasmediterranea amp oldid 1223563628, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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