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Vladimir Ignatyuk (icebreaker)

Vladimir Ignatyuk (Russian: Владимир Игнатюк) is a Russian icebreaking anchor handling tug supply vessel. She was built by Burrard-Yarrows Corporation in Canada in 1983 as Kalvik as part of an Arctic drilling system developed by BeauDril, the drilling subsidiary of Gulf Canada Resources. After the offshore oil exploration in the Beaufort Sea ended in the early 1990s, she was sold to the Canadian shipping company Fednav in 1997 and renamed Arctic Kalvik. In 2003, she was purchased by Murmansk Shipping Company and transferred to Russia.

Vladimir Ignatyuk at McMurdo Sound in Antarctica, 6 February 2013
History
Canada
Name
  • Kalvik (1983–1997)
  • Arctic Kalvik (1997–2003)
NamesakeInuktitut for "wolverine"
Owner
Port of registry
Ordered1 December 1979[1]
BuilderBurrard-Yarrows Corp., Esquimalt[1]
CostC$79 million (two ships without propulsion drive trains)
Yard number554[1]
Laid down9 June 1982[1]
Launched2 April 1983[1]
Completed30 July 1983[1]
In service1983–2003
FateSold to Russia in 2003
Russia
NameVladimir Ignatyuk
NamesakeVladimir Adamovich Ignatyuk [ru]
OwnerMurmansk Shipping Company
Port of registryMurmansk, Russia
AcquiredJuly 2003
In service2003–present
Identification
StatusLaid up
General characteristics (as Vladimir Ignatyuk)[3]
TypeIcebreaker, AHTS
Tonnage
Displacement7,077 tons
Length88 m (289 ft)
Beam17.82 m (58 ft)
Draught
  • 8.3 m (27 ft) (maximum)
  • 7.7 m (25 ft) (icebreaking)
Depth10 m (33 ft)
Ice class
Installed power4 × Stork-Werkspoor 8TM410 (4 × 5,800 hp)
PropulsionTwo shafts; controllable pitch propellers
Speed
  • 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph) (two engines)
  • 3 knots (5.6 km/h; 3.5 mph) in 4 ft (1.2 m) ice
CrewAccommodation for 34

Vladimir Ignatyuk has a sister ship, CCGS Terry Fox, which is operated by the Canadian Coast Guard.

Development and construction edit

In the mid-1970s, Gulf Canada Resources began developing an Arctic drilling system consisting of two mobile drilling units: a Mobile Arctic Caisson (MAC) that could be submerged and filled with gravel to form an artificial drilling island in waters up to 40 metres (130 ft) in depth and a floating Conical Drilling Unit (CDU) designed for drilling in water depths between 40 and 60 metres (130 and 200 ft) while afloat. The intention of this development was to overcome the relatively short operating window of drillships during the ice-free season (100 to 110 days a year) and the water depth limitations of artificial dredged islands in the Canadian part of the Beaufort Sea. The drilling units, each capable of completing one exploration well per year, would be supported by four Arctic Class 4 vessels: two large icebreakers providing 24-hour ice management and standby services on the drilling site and two smaller icebreaking vessels responsible for anchor handling and supply runs between the drilling rigs and coastal bases. By 1982, both drilling units and all four icebreaking vessels were under construction in Canada and Japan for BeauDril, Gulf Canada's drilling subsidiary, and the company had committed itself to a billion-dollar exploration program between 1983 and 1988.[4]

The icebreaker design was provided by the Montreal-based engineering company German & Milne. During the development phase, the hull form was extensively tested at the Hamburg Ship Model Basin (HSVA) ice tank with particular emphasis of preventing broken ice floes from flowing under the hull and into the propellers. The result was a production-friendly fully-developable hull form with a semi-spoon bow and large ice plough.[5][6] The construction of the two icebreakers was awarded to Burrard-Yarrows Corporation in December 1979 and the work was split between the company's Victoria and Vancouver divisions. In order to expedite the delivery of the vessels, Gulf Canada had already purchased the engines, gearboxes, shaft lines and propellers before signing the C$79 million shipbuilding contract for two hulls.[7][8]

The keel of newbuilding number 554 was laid at the Burrard-Yarrows Victoria shipyard on 9 June 1982 and the vessel was launched on 2 April 1983 as Kalvik,[1] Inuktitut for "wolverine", following a naming contest by Northern Territories school children.[5] The icebreaker was delivered on 30 July 1983, slightly behind the original schedule which called for delivery in April when Gulf Canada's exploratory drilling program was set to begin.[7] Kalvik's sister ship, Terry Fox, was delivered in Vancouver in September of the same year.[9] At the time, Beaudril's two 23,200 hp (17,300 kW) icebreakers were the most powerful privately owned icebreaking vessels in the world.[10][11]

Design edit

General characteristics edit

Vladimir Ignatyuk is 88 metres (289 ft) long overall and 75 metres (246 ft) between perpendiculars. She has a beam of 17.82 metres (58 ft) and draws 8.3 metres (27 ft) of water when fully laden. However, during icebreaking operations she operates at a reduced draught of 7.7 metres (25 ft) according to her ice class certificate issued by the Russian Maritime Register of Shipping.[3]

While the crew's common spaces such as mess rooms and lounges are arranged on the main deck, the accommodation — single cabins with private washrooms for the officers and semi-private washrooms for the crew — is arranged in the box-shaped deckhouse. There are berths for 18 crew members and 16 supernumeraries; 34 in total.[6] When operating as a supply vessel, Vladimir Ignatyuk can carry 100 tonnes of bulk cargo in silos, 800 tonnes of deck cargo on the 37 by 13 metres (121 by 43 ft) aft deck, and 200 tonnes of drilling water. The towing gear consists of an 80-ton winch holding 1,500 metres (1,600 yd) of wire and a separate 200-ton double-drum anchor-handling winch.[10] Although initially built without one, Vladimir Ignatyuk was later fitted with a helideck above the foredeck.

Power and propulsion edit

Vladimir Ignatyuk has a diesel-mechanical propulsion system consisting of four main engines driving two shafts through twin input-single output gearboxes. The prime movers are eight-cylinder Stork-Werkspoor 8TM410 medium-speed diesel engines producing 5,800 hp (4,300 kW) at 600 rpm in continuous service. Each pair of main engines is coupled to a Lohmann & Stolterfoht Navilus GVE 1500 A single-stage reduction gearbox via flexible couplings designed to automatically disengage if the propellers are blocked by ice. However, each propeller shaft is also fitted with a heavy flywheel 3 metres (10 ft) in diameter and 0.6 metres (2 ft) in thickness to increase rotational inertia and absorb shocks from propeller-ice interaction. Unlike the other Canadian offshore icebreakers built in the 1980s, Vladimir Ignatyuk does not have a propeller nozzles to shroud her propellers.[8] Her 4.8-metre (16 ft) LIPS Canada nickel aluminium bronze controllable pitch propellers are designed to transmit 9,564 hp (7,132 kW) of power per shaft to the water and produce a combined static bollard pull of about 1,590 kilonewtons (162 tf). For onboard electricity production, the ship has two 800 kW (1,100 hp) Caterpillar D399 ship service diesel generators and a single 200 kW (270 hp) Caterpillar 3406 DITA emergency diesel generator. In addition, both reduction gearboxes are fitted with clutched power take-offs for 1,250 kVa shaft alternators that supply power to the stern thruster and air bubbling system compressors.[7][10][12]

In line with her original Canadian Arctic Shipping Pollution Prevention Regulations (CASPPR) Arctic Class 4 rating, Vladimir Ignatyuk is designed to break at least 4-foot (1.2 m) first-year level ice with a continuous speed of 3 knots (5.6 km/h; 3.5 mph). During icebreaking operations, the ice friction is reduced by lubricating the hull-ice interface with a 750 kW (1,010 hp) low-pressure air bubbling system developed by Wärtsilä.[13] In open water, the system can also act as a bow thruster and used for maneuvering together with the ship's single centerline rudder and a 500 horsepower (370 kW) transverse stern thruster. When operating in ice-free waters, the ship can transit at an economical speed of about 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph) with just two main engines.[12]

Career edit

Kalvik (1983–1997) edit

Between 1983 and 1990, BeauDril's mobile drilling units drilled a total of nineteen exploratory wells in the Canadian part of the Beaufort Sea with the support of Kalvik and other icebreaking vessels: nine with the Mobile Arctic Caisson Molikpaq and ten with the Conical Drilling Unit Kulluk. Twelve wells alone were drilled in the Amauligak prospect, the most significant oil and gas field discovered in the region, but the high expectations for the Beaufort Sea were not met: the area was characterized by a large number of small, widely scattered resources. Molikpaq was mothballed after completing the last well in 1990.[14][15] However, Kulluk was used to drill a total of four wells in 1992 and 1993 for ARCO Alaska on the American part of the Beaufort Sea before being cold-stacked at Tuktoyaktuk.[16]

In 1993, the majority of BeauDril's fleet was purchased by Canadian Marine Drilling (Canmar), the drilling subsidiary of Dome Petroleum (later Amoco Canada) that had been Gulf Canada's main competitor in the Beaufort Sea for more than a decade.[17] However, the company decided to retain the ownership of Kalvik while her sister ship, Terry Fox, was sold to the Canadian Coast Guard following a two-year lease.[18] In 1997, Kalvik was finally sold to the Canadian shipping company Fednav who renamed her Arctic Kalvik and reflagged the vessel to Barbados.[1][19]

Arctic Kalvik (1997–2003) edit

In September 1999, Arctic Kalvik was chartered to the Dutch marine salvage company Bureau Wijsmuller [nl] and stationed at Land's End.[20] In January 2000, she helped to refloat the unladen 16,529 DWT chemical tanker Corsica that had dragged anchor in a storm shortly before New Year. While the icebreaker had to remain about 900 metres (980 yd) from the stricken tanker due to shallow waters, she succeeded in pulling the other ship off the rocks by using 75 % of her rated bollard pull.[21] In February 2000, Arctic Kalvik also participated in refloating the car carrier Asian Parade which had been stranded at Codling Bank on the Irish coast. In October 2001, Wijsmuller terminated the vessel's charter.[20]

In September 2001, Arctic Kalvik was contracted by Crowley Maritime to assist towing the cold-stacked Concrete Island Drilling System (CIDS) Glomar Beaufort Sea I from Prudhoe Bay to Sovetskaya Gavan in the Russian Far East. The submersible gravity-based structure, which also dated back to the 1980s oil exploration in the Arctic, would be rebuilt as the drilling and production platform Orlan for Exxon Neftegas's Sakhalin-I project. Arctic Kalvik provided ice management during the initial tow from Prudhoe Bay to Barrow, and then joined two other tugs to tow the 312-by-312-foot (95 by 95 m) structure across the ocean. The tow arrived in Russia on 14 October 2001 after having refueled from a Russian tanker mid-voyage.[22][23]

In 2002, Arctic Kalvik returned to Alaska through the Northwest Passage to tow another Beaufort Sea drilling unit, the single steel drilling caisson (SDC), from Port Clarence, Alaska to Prudhoe Bay. The 125,000-ton Arctic drilling unit consisting of the forward two thirds of the hull of a very large crude carrier mated with a 218 by 110 metres (715 by 361 ft) submersible barge would be used to drill an exploratory well for Encana Oil & Gas at the McCovey prospect. Together with another former Beaufort Sea icebreaker, Kigoria, the 600-nautical-mile (1,100 km; 690 mi) was completed in just 12 days.[24][25]

In 2003, Arctic Kalvik was sold to the Russian Murmansk Shipping Company (MSCO) and renamed Vladimir Ignatyuk after Vladimir Adamovich Ignatyuk [ru] (1927–2003).[26]

Vladimir Ignatyuk (2003–present) edit

According to MSCO, the acquisition of Vladimir Ignatyuk in July 2003 marked the first time in the history of modern Russia when an icebreaker was owned by a private commercial company instead of a state-controlled entity. The company's spokespersons went as far as to claim that the 7,000-ton icebreaker was "in many ways analogous" to the considerably larger Russian polar icebreakers Kapitan Nikolaev and Kapitan Dranitsyn.[26] Later in 2003, another former Canadian Beaufort Sea offshore icebreaker, the 1979-built former Canmar Kigoriak (then just Kigoria), was also purchased by another Russian owner.

In November 2004, Vladimir Ignatyuk participated in the clean-up operation following the foundering of the 19,500 DWT bulk carrier Stepan Razin which was also owned by MSCO. The ship, laden with 18,000 tons of apatite concentrate bound for Finland in its cargo holds and 287 tons of fuel oil in its tanks, dragged anchor in a storm on 23 October and sank after drifting onto rocks near the entrance to the Kola Bay. Vladimir Ignatyuk managed to pump about 60 tonnes of fuel oil from the wreck's fuel tanks.[27]

In 2005, Vladimir Ignatyuk returned to Alaska to once again tow the single steel drilling caisson after Devon Canada had selected the SDC over an artificial ice island to drill the first wildcat well in the Canadian Beaufort Sea in 17 years.[28][29] With the original Beaufort Sea offshore fleet disbanded and sold overseas, the oil company had to source the icebreaker all the way from Murmansk to complete the one-day tow from Thetis Bay anchorage to the Paktoa C-60 drilling site.[30]

In 2006, Vladimir Ignatyuk was chartered by Royal Dutch Shell together with a flotilla of other contracted icebreakers from Russia, Finland and Sweden to support the company's oil exploration activities in the Beaufort Sea. Although Shell did not manage to begin exploratory drilling until 2012, by which time Vladimir Ignatyuk was no longer part of the support fleet, the initial plan would have brought together two key components of Gulf Canada's original Arctic drilling system developed and built in the early 1980s: the Conical Drilling Unit (CDU) Kulluk and one of the Arctic Class 4 icebreakers designed to protect it from drifting ice during drilling operations.[31][32][33] Vladimir Ignatyuk returned to her home port, Murmansk, from the three-year deployment in the US waters in September 2008.[34]

In late 2008, Vladimir Ignatyuk began towing the hull of the Hutton TLP platform from Murmansk to Cadiz, Spain, for rebuilding.[35] The decommissioned tension-leg platform had been acquired by Sevmorneftegaz in 2002 and its 19,000-tonne topsides had already been transferred to a new ice-resistant production platform being built for the Prirazlomnoye field in the Pechora Sea.[36] While underway to Lerwick for refueling, one of the tow lines connecting the 23,000-tonne platform hull to the two tugboats broke free, but was later reconnected.[37][38] In the end, the hull was towed to Cromarty Firth where it remained until it was towed to a scrapyard in 2021.[39]

In August 2011, National Science Foundation (NSF) contracted Vladimir Ignatyuk to support the annual break-in and resupply mission to McMurdo Station in Antarctica. The Russian icebreaker, which was already providing icebreaking support for the Indian Antarctic Program, would replace the Swedish icebreaker Oden following an announcement from the Swedish Maritime Administration that the nation's most powerful icebreaker was direly needed in the Baltic Sea during the northern hemisphere winter which coincided with the Antarctic resupply mission.[40][41] At the time, United States Coast Guard had two heavy icebreakers dating back to the mid-1970s, USCGC Polar Star and USCGC Polar Sea, but neither was operational: the former had been placed in a caretaker status in 2006 and the latter had suffered an engine casualty in 2010. After the one-year fixed contract worth $11,558,554, NSF and MSCO agreed to exercise the optional extension and Vladimir Ignatyuk returned to McMurdo also in the following year.[42][43]

In 2017, Vladimir Ignatyuk made three voyages to Franz Josef Land to transport construction material, equipment and spare parts, and food to the Arctic archipelago.[44]

In recent years, Vladimir Ignatyuk has left its moorings in Murmansk only rarely. As of May 2019, the Russian Maritime Register of Shipping has withdrawn its classification due to overdue survey.[2]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Vladimir Ignatyuk (8127804)". Sea-web. S&P Global. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Vladimir Ignatyuk (8127804)". Equasis. Ministry of Ecology, Sustainable Development and Energy. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Icebreakers: Vladimir Ignatyuk". Murmansk Shipping Company. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  4. ^ Marks, Adams (1982), "Gulf's Proposed Drilling Systems for the Beaufort Sea", APOA Review, 5 (2): 9–12
  5. ^ a b "Kalvik and Terry Fox: Arctic Class 4 icebreaking, anchor-handling tug/supply vessels", Canadian Shipping and Marine Engineering, vol. 55, pp. 31–35, October 1983
  6. ^ a b "Gulf's Arctic class 4 multi-purpose icebreakers", Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering International, p. 348, September 1983
  7. ^ a b c "More icebreakers for Beaufort Sea development", Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering International, pp. 23–24, January 1982
  8. ^ a b Clark, Karin; Hetherington, Cory; O'Neill, Chris; Zavitz, Jana (1997), Breaking Ice With Finesse: Oil & Gas Exploration in the Canadian Arctic, The Arctic Institute of North America, ISBN 978-0919034945
  9. ^ "Terry Fox (8127799)". Sea-web. S&P Global. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  10. ^ a b c "Kalvik, Terry Fox in Service", Harbour & Shipping, pp. 26–34, November 1983
  11. ^ "Burrard Yarrows Delivers Icebreaker/Utility Vessels To Gulf Canada Resources". Maritime Reporter. October 1983. p. 42. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
  12. ^ a b "A powerful pair of Arctic class 4 anchor handing/tug/supply ships", The Motor Ship, October 1983
  13. ^ "Sophisticated specification for Arctic class 4 icebreakers", The Motor Ship, October 1982
  14. ^ Callow, L. (2013): Oil and Gas Exploration & Development Activity Forecast - Canadian Beaufort Sea 2013–2028. LTLC Consulting and Salmo Consulting Inc.
  15. ^ Timco, G. W. and Frederking, R. (2009): Overview of Historical Canadian Beaufort Sea Information. NRC Canadian Hydraulics Centre Technical Report CHC-TR-057, February 2009.
  16. ^ Beaufort Sea Exploration Wells. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. Retrieved 2015-11-02.
  17. ^ McKenzie-Brown, Peter (2006). The Richness of Discovery - Amoco's First 50 Years in Canada 1948–1998. Amoco Canada Petroleum Company Ltd. ISBN 0-9684022-0-8.
  18. ^ Maginley, Charles D.; Collin, Bernard (2001). The Ships of Canada's Marine Services. St. Catharines, Ontario: Vanwell Publishing Limited. p. 158. ISBN 1-55125-070-5.
  19. ^ "Fednav to Purchase Icebreaker". Maritime Reporter. February 1997. p. 15. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  20. ^ a b "Arctic Kalvik" (in Dutch). Bureau Wijsmuller. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  21. ^ Mulder, Milou (10 January 2000). "Chemical Tanker Re-floated". Marinetalk. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  22. ^ "Crowley Moves ExxonMobil Concrete Island Drilling". Maritime Reporter. New Wave Media. April 2002. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  23. ^ "ExxonMobil's concrete drilling structure moved from Alaska to Russian Far East". Oil & Gas Journal. Endeavor Business Media. 27 May 2002. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  24. ^ "An Arctic Tow by ITC". Maritime Journal. 1 January 2003. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  25. ^ "The SDC makes 600 mile journey to McCovey prospect in 12 days". Petroleum News. August 2002. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
  26. ^ a b "В России появился первый частный ледокол" (in Russian). Нефтяное обозрение (oilru.com). 7 July 2003. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  27. ^ Bambulyak, Alexei; Frantzen, Bjørn (2005). "Oil transport from the Russian part of the Barents Region" (PDF). Svanhovd Environmental Centre. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  28. ^ "Beaufort Sea: Exploration To Production" (PDF). Devon Canada. 20 June 2005. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  29. ^ "Apex Says Beaufort Sea Wildcat Well to be Tested". Rigzone. 29 March 2006. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  30. ^ Chandler, Graham (2006). "Forging a Legacy". Far North Oil & Gas. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  31. ^ "Environmental Assessment: Shell Offshore Inc., Beaufort Sea Exploration Plan" (PDF). US Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service. February 2007. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  32. ^ "Shell's drilling plans calls for a flotilla in the Beaufort". Alaska Journal of Commerce. Binkley Co. 3 March 2007. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  33. ^ Lidji, Eric (20 July 2014). "Explorers 2014: It's try, try, try again for Shell in the Arctic". Petroleum News. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  34. ^ "В порт Мурманск вернулся ледокол ОАО "Мурманское морское пароходство" "Владимир Игнатюк"" (in Russian). b-port.com. 23 September 2008. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  35. ^ "Мурманское морское пароходство проводит уникальную морскую операцию по буксировке основания буровой платформы Hutton TLP Hull" (in Russian). b.port.com. 12 November 2008. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  36. ^ "Murmansk Shipping Company continues towing of Hutton TLP Hull". Decomworld. FCBI Energy Ltd. 3 March 2009. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  37. ^ Bradbury, John (24 December 2008). "Hutton tow line breaks". Sysla. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  38. ^ "Hutton hull breaks free of tow line". 2008. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  39. ^ "North sea oil landmark makes its final journey". Insider. 31 May 2021. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  40. ^ "VLADIMIR IGNATYUK Icebreaker Support of McMurdo Sound Break-In". National Science Foundation. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  41. ^ "Change in Sweden's icebreaker plans causes controversy". Eye on the Arctic. 16 September 2011. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  42. ^ "NSF Charters Vladimir Ignatyuk to Support U.S. Research Stations in Antarctica". World Maritime News. 5 July 2012. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  43. ^ "NSF Signs Agreement to Use Russian Icebreaker for Critical Antarctic Resupply and Refueling Mission". National Science Foundation. 25 August 2011. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  44. ^ "Ледокол «Владимир Игнатюк» совершит третий рейс к Земле Франца-Иосифа" (in Russian). Мурманский вестник. 7 July 2017. Retrieved 5 August 2022.

vladimir, ignatyuk, icebreaker, vladimir, ignatyuk, russian, Владимир, Игнатюк, russian, icebreaking, anchor, handling, supply, vessel, built, burrard, yarrows, corporation, canada, 1983, kalvik, part, arctic, drilling, system, developed, beaudril, drilling, s. Vladimir Ignatyuk Russian Vladimir Ignatyuk is a Russian icebreaking anchor handling tug supply vessel She was built by Burrard Yarrows Corporation in Canada in 1983 as Kalvik as part of an Arctic drilling system developed by BeauDril the drilling subsidiary of Gulf Canada Resources After the offshore oil exploration in the Beaufort Sea ended in the early 1990s she was sold to the Canadian shipping company Fednav in 1997 and renamed Arctic Kalvik In 2003 she was purchased by Murmansk Shipping Company and transferred to Russia Vladimir Ignatyuk at McMurdo Sound in Antarctica 6 February 2013History Canada NameKalvik 1983 1997 Arctic Kalvik 1997 2003 NamesakeInuktitut for wolverine OwnerBeauDril Gulf Canada Resources 1983 1997 Fednav 1997 2003 Port of registryVancouver British Columbia 1983 1997 Barbados 1997 2003 Ordered1 December 1979 1 BuilderBurrard Yarrows Corp Esquimalt 1 CostC 79 million two ships without propulsion drive trains Yard number554 1 Laid down9 June 1982 1 Launched2 April 1983 1 Completed30 July 1983 1 In service1983 2003 FateSold to Russia in 2003 Russia NameVladimir Ignatyuk NamesakeVladimir Adamovich Ignatyuk ru OwnerMurmansk Shipping Company Port of registryMurmansk Russia AcquiredJuly 2003 In service2003 present IdentificationIMO number 8127804 MMSI number 273448450 Call sign UGTP 2 StatusLaid up General characteristics as Vladimir Ignatyuk 3 TypeIcebreaker AHTS Tonnage4 391 GT 1 317 NT 2 076 DWT Displacement7 077 tons Length88 m 289 ft Beam17 82 m 58 ft Draught8 3 m 27 ft maximum 7 7 m 25 ft icebreaking Depth10 m 33 ft Ice classRMRS Icebreaker7 originally CASPPR Arctic Class 4 Installed power4 Stork Werkspoor 8TM410 4 5 800 hp PropulsionTwo shafts controllable pitch propellers Speed14 knots 26 km h 16 mph two engines 3 knots 5 6 km h 3 5 mph in 4 ft 1 2 m ice CrewAccommodation for 34 Vladimir Ignatyuk has a sister ship CCGS Terry Fox which is operated by the Canadian Coast Guard Contents 1 Development and construction 2 Design 2 1 General characteristics 2 2 Power and propulsion 3 Career 3 1 Kalvik 1983 1997 3 2 Arctic Kalvik 1997 2003 3 3 Vladimir Ignatyuk 2003 present 4 See also 5 ReferencesDevelopment and construction editIn the mid 1970s Gulf Canada Resources began developing an Arctic drilling system consisting of two mobile drilling units a Mobile Arctic Caisson MAC that could be submerged and filled with gravel to form an artificial drilling island in waters up to 40 metres 130 ft in depth and a floating Conical Drilling Unit CDU designed for drilling in water depths between 40 and 60 metres 130 and 200 ft while afloat The intention of this development was to overcome the relatively short operating window of drillships during the ice free season 100 to 110 days a year and the water depth limitations of artificial dredged islands in the Canadian part of the Beaufort Sea The drilling units each capable of completing one exploration well per year would be supported by four Arctic Class 4 vessels two large icebreakers providing 24 hour ice management and standby services on the drilling site and two smaller icebreaking vessels responsible for anchor handling and supply runs between the drilling rigs and coastal bases By 1982 both drilling units and all four icebreaking vessels were under construction in Canada and Japan for BeauDril Gulf Canada s drilling subsidiary and the company had committed itself to a billion dollar exploration program between 1983 and 1988 4 The icebreaker design was provided by the Montreal based engineering company German amp Milne During the development phase the hull form was extensively tested at the Hamburg Ship Model Basin HSVA ice tank with particular emphasis of preventing broken ice floes from flowing under the hull and into the propellers The result was a production friendly fully developable hull form with a semi spoon bow and large ice plough 5 6 The construction of the two icebreakers was awarded to Burrard Yarrows Corporation in December 1979 and the work was split between the company s Victoria and Vancouver divisions In order to expedite the delivery of the vessels Gulf Canada had already purchased the engines gearboxes shaft lines and propellers before signing the C 79 million shipbuilding contract for two hulls 7 8 The keel of newbuilding number 554 was laid at the Burrard Yarrows Victoria shipyard on 9 June 1982 and the vessel was launched on 2 April 1983 as Kalvik 1 Inuktitut for wolverine following a naming contest by Northern Territories school children 5 The icebreaker was delivered on 30 July 1983 slightly behind the original schedule which called for delivery in April when Gulf Canada s exploratory drilling program was set to begin 7 Kalvik s sister ship Terry Fox was delivered in Vancouver in September of the same year 9 At the time Beaudril s two 23 200 hp 17 300 kW icebreakers were the most powerful privately owned icebreaking vessels in the world 10 11 Design editGeneral characteristics edit Vladimir Ignatyuk is 88 metres 289 ft long overall and 75 metres 246 ft between perpendiculars She has a beam of 17 82 metres 58 ft and draws 8 3 metres 27 ft of water when fully laden However during icebreaking operations she operates at a reduced draught of 7 7 metres 25 ft according to her ice class certificate issued by the Russian Maritime Register of Shipping 3 While the crew s common spaces such as mess rooms and lounges are arranged on the main deck the accommodation single cabins with private washrooms for the officers and semi private washrooms for the crew is arranged in the box shaped deckhouse There are berths for 18 crew members and 16 supernumeraries 34 in total 6 When operating as a supply vessel Vladimir Ignatyuk can carry 100 tonnes of bulk cargo in silos 800 tonnes of deck cargo on the 37 by 13 metres 121 by 43 ft aft deck and 200 tonnes of drilling water The towing gear consists of an 80 ton winch holding 1 500 metres 1 600 yd of wire and a separate 200 ton double drum anchor handling winch 10 Although initially built without one Vladimir Ignatyuk was later fitted with a helideck above the foredeck Power and propulsion edit Vladimir Ignatyuk has a diesel mechanical propulsion system consisting of four main engines driving two shafts through twin input single output gearboxes The prime movers are eight cylinder Stork Werkspoor 8TM410 medium speed diesel engines producing 5 800 hp 4 300 kW at 600 rpm in continuous service Each pair of main engines is coupled to a Lohmann amp Stolterfoht Navilus GVE 1500 A single stage reduction gearbox via flexible couplings designed to automatically disengage if the propellers are blocked by ice However each propeller shaft is also fitted with a heavy flywheel 3 metres 10 ft in diameter and 0 6 metres 2 ft in thickness to increase rotational inertia and absorb shocks from propeller ice interaction Unlike the other Canadian offshore icebreakers built in the 1980s Vladimir Ignatyuk does not have a propeller nozzles to shroud her propellers 8 Her 4 8 metre 16 ft LIPS Canada nickel aluminium bronze controllable pitch propellers are designed to transmit 9 564 hp 7 132 kW of power per shaft to the water and produce a combined static bollard pull of about 1 590 kilonewtons 162 tf For onboard electricity production the ship has two 800 kW 1 100 hp Caterpillar D399 ship service diesel generators and a single 200 kW 270 hp Caterpillar 3406 DITA emergency diesel generator In addition both reduction gearboxes are fitted with clutched power take offs for 1 250 kVa shaft alternators that supply power to the stern thruster and air bubbling system compressors 7 10 12 In line with her original Canadian Arctic Shipping Pollution Prevention Regulations CASPPR Arctic Class 4 rating Vladimir Ignatyuk is designed to break at least 4 foot 1 2 m first year level ice with a continuous speed of 3 knots 5 6 km h 3 5 mph During icebreaking operations the ice friction is reduced by lubricating the hull ice interface with a 750 kW 1 010 hp low pressure air bubbling system developed by Wartsila 13 In open water the system can also act as a bow thruster and used for maneuvering together with the ship s single centerline rudder and a 500 horsepower 370 kW transverse stern thruster When operating in ice free waters the ship can transit at an economical speed of about 14 knots 26 km h 16 mph with just two main engines 12 Career editKalvik 1983 1997 edit Between 1983 and 1990 BeauDril s mobile drilling units drilled a total of nineteen exploratory wells in the Canadian part of the Beaufort Sea with the support of Kalvik and other icebreaking vessels nine with the Mobile Arctic Caisson Molikpaq and ten with the Conical Drilling Unit Kulluk Twelve wells alone were drilled in the Amauligak prospect the most significant oil and gas field discovered in the region but the high expectations for the Beaufort Sea were not met the area was characterized by a large number of small widely scattered resources Molikpaq was mothballed after completing the last well in 1990 14 15 However Kulluk was used to drill a total of four wells in 1992 and 1993 for ARCO Alaska on the American part of the Beaufort Sea before being cold stacked at Tuktoyaktuk 16 In 1993 the majority of BeauDril s fleet was purchased by Canadian Marine Drilling Canmar the drilling subsidiary of Dome Petroleum later Amoco Canada that had been Gulf Canada s main competitor in the Beaufort Sea for more than a decade 17 However the company decided to retain the ownership of Kalvik while her sister ship Terry Fox was sold to the Canadian Coast Guard following a two year lease 18 In 1997 Kalvik was finally sold to the Canadian shipping company Fednav who renamed her Arctic Kalvik and reflagged the vessel to Barbados 1 19 Arctic Kalvik 1997 2003 edit In September 1999 Arctic Kalvik was chartered to the Dutch marine salvage company Bureau Wijsmuller nl and stationed at Land s End 20 In January 2000 she helped to refloat the unladen 16 529 DWT chemical tanker Corsica that had dragged anchor in a storm shortly before New Year While the icebreaker had to remain about 900 metres 980 yd from the stricken tanker due to shallow waters she succeeded in pulling the other ship off the rocks by using 75 of her rated bollard pull 21 In February 2000 Arctic Kalvik also participated in refloating the car carrier Asian Parade which had been stranded at Codling Bank on the Irish coast In October 2001 Wijsmuller terminated the vessel s charter 20 In September 2001 Arctic Kalvik was contracted by Crowley Maritime to assist towing the cold stacked Concrete Island Drilling System CIDS Glomar Beaufort Sea I from Prudhoe Bay to Sovetskaya Gavan in the Russian Far East The submersible gravity based structure which also dated back to the 1980s oil exploration in the Arctic would be rebuilt as the drilling and production platform Orlan for Exxon Neftegas s Sakhalin I project Arctic Kalvik provided ice management during the initial tow from Prudhoe Bay to Barrow and then joined two other tugs to tow the 312 by 312 foot 95 by 95 m structure across the ocean The tow arrived in Russia on 14 October 2001 after having refueled from a Russian tanker mid voyage 22 23 In 2002 Arctic Kalvik returned to Alaska through the Northwest Passage to tow another Beaufort Sea drilling unit the single steel drilling caisson SDC from Port Clarence Alaska to Prudhoe Bay The 125 000 ton Arctic drilling unit consisting of the forward two thirds of the hull of a very large crude carrier mated with a 218 by 110 metres 715 by 361 ft submersible barge would be used to drill an exploratory well for Encana Oil amp Gas at the McCovey prospect Together with another former Beaufort Sea icebreaker Kigoria the 600 nautical mile 1 100 km 690 mi was completed in just 12 days 24 25 In 2003 Arctic Kalvik was sold to the Russian Murmansk Shipping Company MSCO and renamed Vladimir Ignatyuk after Vladimir Adamovich Ignatyuk ru 1927 2003 26 Vladimir Ignatyuk 2003 present edit According to MSCO the acquisition of Vladimir Ignatyuk in July 2003 marked the first time in the history of modern Russia when an icebreaker was owned by a private commercial company instead of a state controlled entity The company s spokespersons went as far as to claim that the 7 000 ton icebreaker was in many ways analogous to the considerably larger Russian polar icebreakers Kapitan Nikolaev and Kapitan Dranitsyn 26 Later in 2003 another former Canadian Beaufort Sea offshore icebreaker the 1979 built former Canmar Kigoriak then just Kigoria was also purchased by another Russian owner In November 2004 Vladimir Ignatyuk participated in the clean up operation following the foundering of the 19 500 DWT bulk carrier Stepan Razin which was also owned by MSCO The ship laden with 18 000 tons of apatite concentrate bound for Finland in its cargo holds and 287 tons of fuel oil in its tanks dragged anchor in a storm on 23 October and sank after drifting onto rocks near the entrance to the Kola Bay Vladimir Ignatyuk managed to pump about 60 tonnes of fuel oil from the wreck s fuel tanks 27 In 2005 Vladimir Ignatyuk returned to Alaska to once again tow the single steel drilling caisson after Devon Canada had selected the SDC over an artificial ice island to drill the first wildcat well in the Canadian Beaufort Sea in 17 years 28 29 With the original Beaufort Sea offshore fleet disbanded and sold overseas the oil company had to source the icebreaker all the way from Murmansk to complete the one day tow from Thetis Bay anchorage to the Paktoa C 60 drilling site 30 In 2006 Vladimir Ignatyuk was chartered by Royal Dutch Shell together with a flotilla of other contracted icebreakers from Russia Finland and Sweden to support the company s oil exploration activities in the Beaufort Sea Although Shell did not manage to begin exploratory drilling until 2012 by which time Vladimir Ignatyuk was no longer part of the support fleet the initial plan would have brought together two key components of Gulf Canada s original Arctic drilling system developed and built in the early 1980s the Conical Drilling Unit CDU Kulluk and one of the Arctic Class 4 icebreakers designed to protect it from drifting ice during drilling operations 31 32 33 Vladimir Ignatyuk returned to her home port Murmansk from the three year deployment in the US waters in September 2008 34 In late 2008 Vladimir Ignatyuk began towing the hull of the Hutton TLP platform from Murmansk to Cadiz Spain for rebuilding 35 The decommissioned tension leg platform had been acquired by Sevmorneftegaz in 2002 and its 19 000 tonne topsides had already been transferred to a new ice resistant production platform being built for the Prirazlomnoye field in the Pechora Sea 36 While underway to Lerwick for refueling one of the tow lines connecting the 23 000 tonne platform hull to the two tugboats broke free but was later reconnected 37 38 In the end the hull was towed to Cromarty Firth where it remained until it was towed to a scrapyard in 2021 39 In August 2011 National Science Foundation NSF contracted Vladimir Ignatyuk to support the annual break in and resupply mission to McMurdo Station in Antarctica The Russian icebreaker which was already providing icebreaking support for the Indian Antarctic Program would replace the Swedish icebreaker Oden following an announcement from the Swedish Maritime Administration that the nation s most powerful icebreaker was direly needed in the Baltic Sea during the northern hemisphere winter which coincided with the Antarctic resupply mission 40 41 At the time United States Coast Guard had two heavy icebreakers dating back to the mid 1970s USCGC Polar Star and USCGC Polar Sea but neither was operational the former had been placed in a caretaker status in 2006 and the latter had suffered an engine casualty in 2010 After the one year fixed contract worth 11 558 554 NSF and MSCO agreed to exercise the optional extension and Vladimir Ignatyuk returned to McMurdo also in the following year 42 43 In 2017 Vladimir Ignatyuk made three voyages to Franz Josef Land to transport construction material equipment and spare parts and food to the Arctic archipelago 44 In recent years Vladimir Ignatyuk has left its moorings in Murmansk only rarely As of May 2019 update the Russian Maritime Register of Shipping has withdrawn its classification due to overdue survey 2 See also editHistory of the petroleum industry in Canada frontier exploration and development References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vladimir Ignatyuk a b c d e f g h Vladimir Ignatyuk 8127804 Sea web S amp P Global Retrieved 4 May 2019 a b Vladimir Ignatyuk 8127804 Equasis Ministry of Ecology Sustainable Development and Energy Retrieved 4 May 2019 a b Icebreakers Vladimir Ignatyuk Murmansk Shipping Company Retrieved 4 May 2019 Marks Adams 1982 Gulf s Proposed Drilling Systems for the Beaufort Sea APOA Review 5 2 9 12 a b Kalvik and Terry Fox Arctic Class 4 icebreaking anchor handling tug supply vessels Canadian Shipping and Marine Engineering vol 55 pp 31 35 October 1983 a b Gulf s Arctic class 4 multi purpose icebreakers Shipbuilding amp Marine Engineering International p 348 September 1983 a b c More icebreakers for Beaufort Sea development Shipbuilding amp Marine Engineering International pp 23 24 January 1982 a b Clark Karin Hetherington Cory O Neill Chris Zavitz Jana 1997 Breaking Ice With Finesse Oil amp Gas Exploration in the Canadian Arctic The Arctic Institute of North America ISBN 978 0919034945 Terry Fox 8127799 Sea web S amp P Global Retrieved 4 May 2019 a b c Kalvik Terry Fox in Service Harbour amp Shipping pp 26 34 November 1983 Burrard Yarrows Delivers Icebreaker Utility Vessels To Gulf Canada Resources Maritime Reporter October 1983 p 42 Retrieved 20 July 2018 a b A powerful pair of Arctic class 4 anchor handing tug supply ships The Motor Ship October 1983 Sophisticated specification for Arctic class 4 icebreakers The Motor Ship October 1982 Callow L 2013 Oil and Gas Exploration amp Development Activity Forecast Canadian Beaufort Sea 2013 2028 LTLC Consulting and Salmo Consulting Inc Timco G W and Frederking R 2009 Overview of Historical Canadian Beaufort Sea Information NRC Canadian Hydraulics Centre Technical Report CHC TR 057 February 2009 Beaufort Sea Exploration Wells Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Retrieved 2015 11 02 McKenzie Brown Peter 2006 The Richness of Discovery Amoco s First 50 Years in Canada 1948 1998 Amoco Canada Petroleum Company Ltd ISBN 0 9684022 0 8 Maginley Charles D Collin Bernard 2001 The Ships of Canada s Marine Services St Catharines Ontario Vanwell Publishing Limited p 158 ISBN 1 55125 070 5 Fednav to Purchase Icebreaker Maritime Reporter February 1997 p 15 Retrieved 4 May 2019 a b Arctic Kalvik in Dutch Bureau Wijsmuller Retrieved 4 May 2019 Mulder Milou 10 January 2000 Chemical Tanker Re floated Marinetalk Retrieved 4 May 2019 Crowley Moves ExxonMobil Concrete Island Drilling Maritime Reporter New Wave Media April 2002 Retrieved 4 May 2019 ExxonMobil s concrete drilling structure moved from Alaska to Russian Far East Oil amp Gas Journal Endeavor Business Media 27 May 2002 Retrieved 4 May 2019 An Arctic Tow by ITC Maritime Journal 1 January 2003 Retrieved 2018 10 28 The SDC makes 600 mile journey to McCovey prospect in 12 days Petroleum News August 2002 Retrieved 2015 11 03 a b V Rossii poyavilsya pervyj chastnyj ledokol in Russian Neftyanoe obozrenie oilru com 7 July 2003 Retrieved 4 May 2019 Bambulyak Alexei Frantzen Bjorn 2005 Oil transport from the Russian part of the Barents Region PDF Svanhovd Environmental Centre Retrieved 4 May 2019 Beaufort Sea Exploration To Production PDF Devon Canada 20 June 2005 Retrieved 4 May 2019 Apex Says Beaufort Sea Wildcat Well to be Tested Rigzone 29 March 2006 Retrieved 4 May 2019 Chandler Graham 2006 Forging a Legacy Far North Oil amp Gas Retrieved 4 May 2019 Environmental Assessment Shell Offshore Inc Beaufort Sea Exploration Plan PDF US Department of the Interior Minerals Management Service February 2007 Retrieved 4 May 2019 Shell s drilling plans calls for a flotilla in the Beaufort Alaska Journal of Commerce Binkley Co 3 March 2007 Retrieved 4 May 2019 Lidji Eric 20 July 2014 Explorers 2014 It s try try try again for Shell in the Arctic Petroleum News Retrieved 4 May 2019 V port Murmansk vernulsya ledokol OAO Murmanskoe morskoe parohodstvo Vladimir Ignatyuk in Russian b port com 23 September 2008 Retrieved 4 May 2019 Murmanskoe morskoe parohodstvo provodit unikalnuyu morskuyu operaciyu po buksirovke osnovaniya burovoj platformy Hutton TLP Hull in Russian b port com 12 November 2008 Retrieved 4 May 2019 Murmansk Shipping Company continues towing of Hutton TLP Hull Decomworld FCBI Energy Ltd 3 March 2009 Retrieved 4 May 2019 Bradbury John 24 December 2008 Hutton tow line breaks Sysla Retrieved 4 May 2019 Hutton hull breaks free of tow line 2008 Retrieved 4 May 2019 North sea oil landmark makes its final journey Insider 31 May 2021 Retrieved 5 August 2022 VLADIMIR IGNATYUK Icebreaker Support of McMurdo Sound Break In National Science Foundation Retrieved 4 May 2019 Change in Sweden s icebreaker plans causes controversy Eye on the Arctic 16 September 2011 Retrieved 4 May 2019 NSF Charters Vladimir Ignatyuk to Support U S Research Stations in Antarctica World Maritime News 5 July 2012 Retrieved 4 May 2019 NSF Signs Agreement to Use Russian Icebreaker for Critical Antarctic Resupply and Refueling Mission National Science Foundation 25 August 2011 Retrieved 4 May 2019 Ledokol Vladimir Ignatyuk sovershit tretij rejs k Zemle Franca Iosifa in Russian Murmanskij vestnik 7 July 2017 Retrieved 5 August 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vladimir Ignatyuk icebreaker amp oldid 1155019136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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