- Volgotanker
Volgotanker ( _ru. ОАО «Волжское нефтеналивное пароходство „Волгота́нкер“», '"Volgotanker"
Volga Oil Tanker ShippingJSC ') is a Russian company engaged in the business of transporting oil and oil product by tanker ship along the inland waterways and coastal seas of European Russia. It is headquartered in Samara.History
Soviet period
The history of Volgotanker goes back to the Oil Fleet Agency, part of the Volga State Shipping Company, which was established in 1923. In 1938, the agency was spun off into a separate state-owned company, called Volgatanker. Its mandate was to ship crude oil and oil products, primarily coming from the
Baku oil fields, from the Caspian port ofAstrakhan to Russia's industrial centers along the Volga and Kama. The service turned out to be highly important during theSecond World War , when most of the railway lines connecting the Caucasus with Central Russia were cut by enemy action in 1942. Fifty-nine of the company'sbarge s were sunk or damaged during the war, primarily byLuftwaffe 's bombs and mines, with the loss of 123 sailors.Soon after the war, the company also started transporting oil from Russia's so-called "Second Baku" - the oil fields in
Bashkiria and easternTatarstan . As oil refineries were built along the Volga and its tributaries (e.g. atUfa ,Kstovo , andSyzran ), their products were taken to the markers throughout Russia by Volgotanker as well. TheVolga-Baltic Waterway andVolga-Don Canal made it possible to deliver oil and oil products to Soviet ports on the Baltic, Azov andBlack Sea s as well. As of 1965, the company transported 3 million metric tons of oil and oil products per year.That year, Volgotanker boats started taking oil directly to Finnish ports as well.When in August 1970, Volgotanker's "Nefterudovoz-3" arrived to
Kandalaksha , it was the first tanker ever to take a cargo of oil directly from the Volga basin over theWhite Sea-Baltic Canal and into theWhite Sea .Alexei Bambulyak, Bjorn Franzen. [http://www.wwf.ru/data/publ/oil_report_russian.pdf Transportation of oil from the Russian part of the Barents Sea region, as of January 2005] ru icon]By 1984, shipping volumes reached 35 million tons per year.
Post-Soviet
Since the late 1980s, the operations entered a decline along with the much of the Soviet economy. In 1992, the company was privatized as a
Joint-Stock Company (a corporation). With the decline of domestic operations, transportation of oil for export became the main line of business for the company, reaching 70% of its operations by 1993. It was not until the early 21th century that the volume of operations started to rise again.Besides its traditional Baltic and Black Sea export directions, in the 2003 Volgotanker resumed using the
White Sea-Baltic Canal . The plan was to transport 800,000 tons of fuel oil this way, for transfer toLatvia n seagoing tankers at a floating transfer station near theOsinki Island in theOnega Bay , 36 km north-east of the port of Onega. The next year plans were for 1,500,000 tons.Transfer operations started on June 24, 2003. Unfortunately, already on September 1 a collision between Volgotanker's "Nefterudovoz-57M" and Latvian "Zoja-I" during such a transfer caused an
oil spill . Various estimates of the extent of the spill have been made, the final one being 45 tons, of which only 9 tons have been collected. Local fishery authorities reported that some 74 km of the coast were contaminated by oil, at least 300 seabirds and a number of seals died. As a result, fines were paid by Volgotanker to the city of Onega, the transfer operations closed down by theArkhangelsk Oblast authorities after only 220,000 tons have been exported, and the company did not get a permit for similar operations in the following year.Yukos was Volgoneft's largest customer as well as a major shareholder. AsYukos started having problems with the government in the mid-2000s, it was replaced withRosneft as the main customer.In 2004, Volgotanker itself has been charged with tax evasion. After a few rocky years, the company was eventually placed into bankruptcy in 2007, and sales of assets were impending as of the summer 2007. On November 11, 2007, one of their boats, Volgoneft-139, broke apart in the
Kerch Strait , spilling at least 1,300 tonsfuel oil into the sea.The fleet
As of the mid 2000s, the company controls 70% of liquid cargo transportation market in the basin of Volga and Kama, and is carries about 10% of the total Russian exports of
fuel oil . It owns 353 vessels with the total carrying capacity of over1.2 million tons, as follows:
* 204 tankers andore-bulk-oil carrier s with capacities ranging from 300 to 10,000 tons;
* 95barge s with a capacity ranging from 1,000 to 9,000 tons;
* 54tugboat s. Most boats have a name consisting of the word Volgoneft and a number, e.g. Volgoneft-139.External links
* [http://www.volgotanker.com Volgotanker Official Site] (in English and Russian)
References
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