Murmansk Shipping Company

Murmansk Shipping Company
Company typePrivate
Founded1939
DefunctOctober 6, 2020 (2020-10-06)
Headquarters,
Key people
Kulikov Nikolay Vladimirovich (chairman)
ServicesShipping
Websitewww.msco.ru

Murmansk Shipping Company (Russian: Мурманское морское пароходство), often abbreviated as MSCO, was a Russian shipping company based in Murmansk. It was one of the primary shipping companies operating in Arctic Russia and northern Europe, in 2014 the company had 303 vessels, with a total dead weight of about 1.2 million tons. The company ran a notable museum in Murmansk.

History

The company was established in 1939 as the Murmansk State Dry-Cargo and Passenger Shipping Company, and was renamed in 1967. It specialised in arctic transportation, and by 1940 it had 37 vessels with a total deadweight of 112,200 tons.[1] During World War II its carriers served as allied escorts. It performed passenger as well as cargo navigation.[2] In 1973, the Northern Fleet and the Murmansk Shipping Company commenced transporting spent nuclear fuel by barges to Murmansk, and then delivering it to Mayak by train.[3] In 1977, one of its ships, the nuclear-powered icebreaker Arktika, reached the North Pole for the first time.

Nuclear-powered icebreaker Taymyr (left) and oil tanker Indiga (right)

The company was reorganized into the Joint Stock Company in 1993. At this time the company faced significant criticism from environmentalists which culminated from the Yablokov Report, drawn up by presidential adviser Aleksey Yablokov, which revealed that the Northern Fleet and the Murmansk Shipping Company had dumped some 2.5 million curies of liquid and solid radioactive waste in the Arctic Ocean between 1959 and 1991.[4] In 1996 the Murmansk Shipping Company reported 3,100 fuel assemblies were stored on the service ship Lotta.[5]

Facilities

The main operating facility of the company was at Atomflot, to the north of the city on the Murmansk Fjord. The base contained liquid and solid waste processing systems, warehouses for shipping supplies and workshops etc. The ships were maintained at the dry docks in Murmansk, and the Zvezdochka shipyard in Severodvinsk also made repairs to the reactors of the nuclear-powered icebreakers.[6]

Museum

The Murmansk Shipping Company Museum was on Volodarskogo Street in Murmansk, established in 1977, and had an extensive collection of artifacts related to its history and Russian naval history. Among its displays were photographs of polar captains, ship bells, micro model replicas, marine equipment, with one section dedicated entirely to icebreakers and their history.[7] Icebreakers represented by particularly fine models include Yermak (1898), Fyodor Litke (1909), Sedov (1909), Alexander Sibiryakov (1909), Sadko (1913), Semyon Dezhnov (1939), Severny Veter (1944), Lenin (1959), Kiev (1965), Artika (1972), Krasin (1976), Kapitan Dranitsyn (1980), Vladmimir Ignatyuk (1983), Rossiya (1985) and Taymyr (1989).

Past and present vessels

As of 2014 the company had 303 vessels, with a total deadweight of about 1.2 million tons.[1] A selected number of ships are shown below:

  • Indiga and Varzuga, Finnish icebreaking product tankers purchased in 2003
  • A number of SA-15 type Arctic multipurpose cargo ships (Kapitan Danilkin and Yuriy Arshenevskiy)
  • Sevmorput, the last nuclear-powered cargo ship previously operated by Murmansk Shipping Company
  • Vladimir Ignatyuk, an icebreaker purchased from Canada
  • Kotlas, a 1989-built tanker
  • Kuzma Minin, a 1980-built bulk carrier
  • Volodarsky, the oldest vessel of the fleet (launched in 1929) used to transport and store radioactive waste

References

  1. ^ a b "History". Murmansk Shipping Company. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  2. ^ Мурманское морское пароходство (in Russian). Журнал "Морской флот". Retrieved 16 July 2014.
  3. ^ Vidas, Davor (23 November 2000). Protecting the Polar Marine Environment: Law and Policy for Pollution Prevention. Cambridge University Press. p. 217. ISBN 978-1-139-42814-9.
  4. ^ Darst, Robert G. (2001). Smokestack Diplomacy: Cooperation and Conflict in East-West Environmental Politics. MIT Press. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-262-26235-4.
  5. ^ Potter, William C.; Hansell, Cristina (13 September 2013). The Global Politics of Combatting N: A Supply-Side Approach. Routledge. p. 131. ISBN 978-1-317-98961-5.
  6. ^ Nuclear wastes in the Arctic : an analysis of Arctic and other regional impacts from Soviet nuclear contamination. DIANE Publishing. 1995. p. 122. ISBN 978-1-4289-2035-4.
  7. ^ "MSCO Museum". Murmansk Shipping Company. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018. Retrieved 18 July 2014.

External links

  • Official Murmansk Shipping Company website—(in English)
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