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MS Berge Stahl

 
Wikipedia: MS Berge Stahl
Berge stahl 1024.JPG
Berge Stahl, the worlds largest bulk carrier.
Career Norwegian Merchant Navy Ensign
Name: Berge Stahl
Owner: Partrederiet Bergesen
Operator: Bergesen Worldwide Gas ASA
Builder: Hyundai Heavy Industries
Laid down: 15 march 1986
Launched: 5 september 1986
Status: In service
General characteristics
Tonnage: 364 767 DWT
Length: 342,08 m
Beam: 63,5 m
Draft: 23,035 m
Propulsion: 1 screw, ∅9m
Diesel Hyundai 7L90MCE
Speed: 13,5 knots
Complement: 16
Notes: IMO: 8420804

The MS Berge Stahl is the largest bulk carrier ship in the world. She is registered in Stavanger, Norway. She was previously registered in Monrovia, Liberia.

An iron ore carrier, the Berge Stahl has a capacity of 364,767 metric tons deadweight (DWT) she was built in 1986 by Hyundai Heavy Industries.[1][2][3] The Berge Stahl is 1,122 feet (343 m), has a beam, or width, of 208.3 feet (65 m), and a draft, or depth in the water, of 23 m.[4]

Her Hyundai B&W 7L90MCE diesel engine is 30 feet (9 m) high, drives a single 30 foot (9 m) propeller, and puts out 27,610 horsepower (20.59 MW), has a top speed of 13.5 knots (25.0 km/h), and has a 30 foot (9 m) high rudder.[5][citation needed]

She is owned by the Singaporean shipping company BW Group.[2]

Because of her massive size, the Berge Stahl can only tie up, fully loaded, at two ports in the world, hauling ore from the Terminal Marítimo de Ponta da Madeira in Brazil to the Europoort near Rotterdam in the Netherlands. Even at these ports, passage must be timed to coincide with high tides to prevent the ship running aground. The Berge Stahl makes this trip about ten times each year, or a round-trip about every five weeks.[6] In September 2006, the ship carried ore to the port of Majishan, China, where she was dry-docked and given her twenty-year inspection.[7] On the return voyage to Rotterdam, she picked up a partial load of ore in Dampier, Western Australia, and Saldanha Bay in South Africa (where the maximum depth permitted is 21 m).[8]

See also

References

External links


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