50 Let Pobedy

Career (Russia)
Name: 50 Let Pobedy (50 лет Победы)
Owner: Russian Federation
Operator: Atomflot (Rosatom)
Port of registry: Murmansk,  Russia[1]
Builder: Baltic Shipyard, Saint Petersburg, Russia
Yard number: 705
Laid down: October 4, 1989
Launched: 1993
Maiden voyage: 2007
In service: March 12, 2007[1]
Identification: IMO number: 9152959
Call sign: UGYU
Status: In service
General characteristics
Class and type:Arktika-class nuclear icebreaker
Tonnage:23,439 GT
3,505 DWT
Displacement:25,840 tons
Length:159.60 m (523 ft 7 in)
Beam:30 m (98 ft 5 in) (max)
28 m (92 ft) (waterline)
Draught:11.08 m (36 ft 4 in)
Depth:17.2 m (56 ft 5 in)
Ice class:LL1
Installed power:Two OK-900A nuclear reactors (2 × 27,6 MW)
Propulsion:Nuclear-turbo-electric; three shafts
3 × 17.6 MW electric propulsion motors
Speed:21.4 knots (39.6 km/h; 24.6 mph) (max)
Endurance:4 years
Capacity:128 passengers
Crew:140
50 Let Pobedy on a Russian stamp

NS 50 Let Pobedy (Russian: 50 лет Победы), translated as 50 Years of Victory or Fiftieth Anniversary of Victory, is a Russian Arktika-class nuclear-powered icebreaker and the largest nuclear-powered icebreaker in the world.

Construction on project no. 10521 started on October 4, 1989 at the Baltic Works in Leningrad (currently Saint Petersburg), USSR. Originally the ship was named NS Ural. Work was halted in 1994 for lack of funds, so that the actual fiftieth anniversary of Victory Day, in 1995, found the ship in an abandoned state. Construction was restarted in 2003.

On 30 November 2004, a fire broke out on the ship. All workers aboard the vessel had to be evacuated while the fire crews battled the fire for some 20 hours before getting it under control; one worker was sent to the hospital. There was no threat of radioactive contamination as the nuclear reactor did not yet have fuel inside.

She was finally completed in the beginning of 2007, after the 60th Anniversary. The icebreaker sailed into the Gulf of Finland for two weeks of sea trials on February 1, 2007.

Upon completing sea trials, the icebreaker returned to St. Petersburg Baltic shipyard and started preparations for her maiden voyage to Murmansk. The new ship showed superior characteristics for an icebreaker, such as exceptional maneuverability and a top speed of 21.4 knots (39.6 km/h; 24.6 mph).

She arrived at her homeport Murmansk on April 11, 2007.

The icebreaker is an upgrade of the Arktika-class. The 159.60 m (524 ft) long and 30.0 m (98 ft) wide vessel, with a displacement of 25840 metric tons, is designed to break through ice up to 5 meters (16.4 feet) thick. She has a 140-man crew.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Fiftieth Anniversary of Victory is also an experimental project; for the first time in the history of Russian icebreakers it used a spoon-shaped bow. As predicted by the ship's designers, such a shape increases the efficiency of the ship's efforts in breaking the ice. The icebreaker is equipped with an all-new digital automated control system. The biological shielding complex was heavily modernized and re-certified by the State Commission. A new ecological compartment was created.

The ship has an athletic/exercise facility, a swimming pool, a library, a restaurant, a massage facility, and a music salon at the crew's disposal.

A group of eclipse chasers have used the vessel to observe the eclipse of August 1, 2008. They departed from Murmansk on July 21, 2008 and reached the North Pole on July 25, 2008, which sets a speed record for the ship (the trip lasted 4 days instead of 7).[7][8]

Arctic tourism

Since 1989 the nuclear-powered icebreakers have also been used for tourist purposes carrying passengers to the North Pole. Each participant pays up to US $25,000 for a cruise lasting three weeks. The Fiftieth Anniversary of Victory contains an accommodation deck customised for tourists.

Quark Expeditions chartered the ship (which they name as 50 Years of Victory) for expeditions to the North Pole in 2008. The vessel's maiden voyage to the North Pole embarked in Murmansk, on June 24, 2008. The ship carried 128 guests in 64 cabins in five categories. 50 Years of Victory completed a total of three expeditions to the North Pole in 2008 for the polar adventure company.

As of February, 2013, Quark Expeditions was listing the 50 Years of Victory in the company fleet[9] and offering it for a North Pole cruise[10] as well as Russian cruise company Poseidon Expeditions.[11]

On July 30, 2013 50 Years of Victory reached the North Pole for the 100th time in the history of icebreaker navigation during one of Poseidon Expeditions cruises.[12]

In October 2013, it carried the Olympic Fire to the North Pole.[13]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Russian Registry of Ships". Archived from the original on 5 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-22.
  2. Anastasia Yakonuk (February 26, 2007). "A ship called ’Fifty years after the victory’". Sveriges Radio. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
  3. "Russia tests nuclear icebreaker on open sea". RIA Novosti. 31 January 2007. Archived from the original on 18 February 2007. Retrieved 2007-02-02.
  4. "Titans of the Upper Latitudes". Aeroflot in-flight magazine. 2006 #1. Retrieved 2007-01-31. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. "Russia to get new nuclear-powered icebreaker this year". Bellona.org. 1 March 2006. Retrieved 2007-02-02.
  6. "Quark Expeditions fleet information". Quark Expeditions. 2008-03-17. Archived from the original on 18 June 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-25.
  7. Franz Josef Land & Eclipse viewing off Novaya Zemlya On Board the Icebreaker: "50 years of victory", TravelQuest International
  8. Nuclear-power icebreaker offers first passenger cruise to North Pole, Professional Mariner journal of the maritime industry
  9. http://www.quarkexpeditions.com/our-ships/50-years-of-victory
  10. http://www.quarkexpeditions.com/arctic-expeditions/north-pole-cruise-ultimate-arctic-adventure/overview
  11. http://poseidonexpeditions.com/ships/50-years-of-victory/
  12. "100th achievement of the North Pole" Poseidon Expeditions blog, July 31, 2013
  13. "Den olympiske ild kom forbi Nordpolen" Maritime Denmark, 27 oktober 2013

External links