List of Russia-flagged cargo ships
This list of Russia-flagged cargo ships consists of vessels which are registered in Russia (or the Soviet Union ) and subject to the laws of that country. Any ship which flew the flag at any point in its career, and is present in the encyclopedia, is listed here.
List of ships
Name
Owner
Year built
Type
Tonnage
Status
Baltic Leader
Promsvyazbank
2000
Ro-ro
8,831
In active service
Captain Kurbatskiy
Far East Shipping Company
1983
SA-15 type
18,627
Scrapped in 2011[ 1]
Grigory Lovtsov
2002
Ro-ro
272
Stuck in ice and lost in the Shantar Islands in January 2022[ 2]
Kapitan Man
Far East Shipping Company
1985
SA-15 type
18,574 GT
Scrapped in 2012
Kuzma Minin
Murmansk Shipping Company
1980
Bulk carrier
23,169
Scrapped in 2020[ 3]
Liberty
General cargo
226
Sunk as artificial reef south of Cyprus on 22 May 2009[ 4]
Matros Pozynich
Crane Marine Contractors
2010
Bulk carrier
17,025
In active service
Monchegorsk
Murmansk Shipping Company
1983
SA-15 type
18,627 GT
Scrapped in 2009[ 5]
Omskiy-205
Marship
1993
Omskiy type
2,958
In active service
Palflot-2
1981
Oil tanker
2,015
Caught fire in the Caspian Sea in April 2016[ 6]
Petrozavodsk
Karelian Sg Company
1978
Reefer
1,130
Ran aground off Bear Island , Norway , in May 2009[ 7]
Phoenix
Shelikhov-Golikov Company
1794
Sailing ship
~200
Lost at sea in 1799[ 8]
Ryazan
Russian merchant fleet
1909
Passenger-cargo
3,500
Scuttled by German Navy while in Guam following the entrance of the United States into World War I in 1917[ 9]
SMP Novodvinsk
Northern Shipping Company
2008
General cargo
4,106
In active service
Tibor Szamueli
V/O Sudoimport
1979
Barge carrier
35,817
Scrapped in 2003[ 10]
Yulius Fuchik
V/O Sudoimport
1979
Barge carrier
35,817
Scrapped in 2003[ 10]
Zhibek Zholy
KTZ Express JSC
2016
Bulk carrier
5,686
In active service
List of classes
References
^ Market commentary Archived 26 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine . GMS Weekly, 18 November 2011. Retrieved 25 November 2011
^ Voytenko, Mikhail (5 January 2022). "Coastal freighter stuck in ice, issued distress signal, Okhotsk sea" . Fleetmon . Retrieved 22 June 2022 .
^ "Kuzma Minin (7721263)" . Miramar Ship Index . Retrieved 2 July 2022 .
^ "Liberty" . Cyprus Diving Center . Retrieved 4 July 2022 .
^ From September 25th to December 31st . Robin Des Bois, January 21st, 2010. Retrieved 2011-02-06 .
^ "Russian tanker Palflot-2 catches fire in Caspian Sea, 1 crew member reported killed (VIDEO)" . www.vesselfinder.com . Retrieved 2022-11-01 .
^ Stange, Rolf (17 May 2009). "Russian ship wrecked at Bjørnøya" . Spotsbergen Svalbard . Retrieved 4 July 2022 .
^ Grinëv, Andrei V. (Fall 2011). "Russian Maritime Catastrophes during the Colonization of Alaska, 1741–1867" . The Pacific Northwest Quarterly . 102 (4). Translated by Bland, Richard L. University of Washington: 178– 194. JSTOR 24624633 . Retrieved 1 December 2020 .
^ Hoppe, Jon (October 1, 2015). "The Destruction of the S.M.S. Cormoran and the First U.S. Shot Fired in World War I" . Naval History Blog . U.S. Naval Institute. Retrieved 6 March 2021 .
^ a b TIBOR SAMUELI - IMO 7505334 . Comment by Marek Gono. Retrieved 2012-08-06 .
^ "omskiyEn | Ship Trade House" . 2017-10-11. Retrieved 2022-06-09 .
^ Kitagawa, H. et al. Northern Sea Route. Shortest Sea Route Linking East Asia and Europe. Archived 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ship & Ocean Foundation, 2001. ISBN 4-88404-027-9 .