Icebreaker Taymyr on stamp of Russia |
|
Career | |
---|---|
Name: | Taymyr (Таймыр) |
Owner: | Russian Federation[1] |
Operator: | Atomflot (Rosatom) |
Port of registry: | Murmansk, Russia[1] |
Builder: | Wärtsilä, Helsinki New Shipyard, Finland Baltic Shipyard, Leningrad, Soviet Union |
Yard number: | 474[1] |
Completed: | 30 June 1989[1] |
Identification: | IMO number: 8417481 Call sign: UEMM[1] |
Status: | In service |
General characteristics [1] | |
Class and type: | Taymyr class nuclear icebreaker |
Tonnage: | 20,791 GT 6,237 NT 3,550 DWT |
Displacement: | 21,100 tons |
Length: | LOA 149.70 m (491.1 ft) LBP 136.32 m (447.2 ft) |
Beam: | 28.87 m (94.7 ft) |
Draught: | 9.00 m (29.53 ft) |
Depth: | 15.68 m (51.4 ft) |
Ice class: | RMRS Icebreaker8 |
Installed power: | KLT-40M nuclear reactor (171 MW)[2] 2 × GTA 6421-OM5 steam turbines (2 × 18,400 kW) |
Propulsion: | Nuclear-turbo-electric; three shafts Three electric motors (3 × 12,000 kW) Three 4-bladed fixed-pitch propellers |
Speed: | 20 kn (37 km/h; 23 mph) in open water 2 kn (3.7 km/h; 2.3 mph) in 2 m (6.6 ft) level ice[3] |
Taymyr (Russian: Таймыр) is a shallow-draft nuclear powered icebreaker, and the first of two similar vessels. She was built in 1989 for the Soviet Union in Finland, at the Helsinki New Shipyard by Wärtsilä, by order of the Murmansk Shipping Co.
The Taymyr was delivered to Russia for the installation of the reactor system. It has a nuclear-turbo-electric reactor giving up to 50,000 hp. This shallow-draft icebreaker is used mainly for clearing rivers, including their mouths and estuaries of ice and opening channels in order to make winter navigation possible.
This icebreaker and its sister ship Vaygach belong to a type known as Taymyr-class River Icebreakers.
In the spring of 2011 a minor radiation leak was detected in the ships reactor ventilation system [4] - the second such leak on board the vessel in as many years. The Taymyr returned to Murmansk under diesel power for repair. By then 6,000 litres of coolant had leaked from its nuclear reactor.[5]