Maritime Vessels Directory
Filters
- Type
- Buoy/Lighthouse Tender (1)
- Fisheries Patrol Vessel (5)
- Fishery Research Ship (4)
- Hydrographic Research Ship (1)
- Ice Breaker (6)
- Oceanographic Research Ship (1)
- Patrol Vessel (13)
- Rescue Vessel (1)
- Research Ship (2)
- Stern Trawler (1)
- Supply Vessel Anchor Handling (1)
- Tender (8)
- Flag
- Canada (44)
- Port
- OTTAWA (7)
- OTTAWA, ON (36)
- Companies
- Bel-Aire Shipyard Ltd. (1)
- Breton Industrial & Marine Ltd. (1)
- Burrard Dry Dock Co. Ltd. (1)
- Burrard Yarrows Corp. (1)
- Canadian Coast Guard (1)
- Canadian Coast Guard, Maritime Region (5)
- Canadian Vickers Shipyards Ltd. (1)
- Chantier Meridien Industrie Inc. (3)
- Davie Yards Inc. (1)
- Department of Fisheries & Oceans, Canadian Coast Guard (44)
- Ferguson Industries Ltd. (2)
- Fisheries & Oceans Canada (5)
- Fisheries And Oceans Canada (5)
- Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Coast Guard (7)
- Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Garde Côtière Canadienne / Canadian Coast Guard (8)
- Georgetown Shipyard Inc. (2)
- Halifax Shipyard Limited (8)
- Hike Metal Products Ltd. (1)
- Langsten Slip & Båtbyggeri AS (1)
- Marine Industries Ltd. (3)
- Marystown Shipyard Ltd. (2)
- Narasaki Zosen K.K. (1)
- Pictou Industries Ltd. (1)
- Port Weller Dry Dock (1)
- Port Weller Dry Docks Ltd. (3)
- Saint John Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. Ltd. (1)
- Vancouver Shipyards Co. Ltd. (1)
- Versatile Pacific Shipyards Inc (4)
- Vito Steel Boat & Barge Constructio n Ltd. (1)
- Yarrows Ltd. (2)
- Year
- 1963 (1)
- 1967 - 1969 (6)
- 1970 (1)
- 1977 - 1979 (4)
- 1982 - 1983 (4)
- 1985 - 1988 (14)
- 1991 - 1992 (2)
- 2008 (1)
- 2012 - 2014 (11)
- Gross Tonnage
- 180 - 963 (22)
- 1105 - 1971 (6)
- 2021 - 2405 (5)
- 3444 - 3818 (6)
- 4233 (1)
- 5910 (1)
- 6098 - 6167 (2)
- 11345 (1)
TRACY
Tender | Flag: Canada | Port: OTTAWA, ON
VECTOR
Hydrographic Research Ship | Flag: Canada | Port: OTTAWA, ON
VLADYKOV
Fishery Research Ship | Flag: Canada | Port: OTTAWA, ON
W.E. RICKER
Patrol Vessel | Flag: Canada | Port: OTTAWA
Maritime News
Sweden Seeks Return of Chinese Ship Linked to Baltic Sea Subsea Cable Sabotage
Sweden is asking a Chinese vessel to return to Swedish waters to help facilitate the Nordic country's investigation into recent breaches of undersea fibre-optic cables in the Baltic Sea, Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said on Tuesday.Two subsea cables, one linking Finland and Germany and the other connecting Sweden to Lithuania, were damaged in less than 24 hours on Nov. 17-18, raising suspicions of sabotage, countries and companies involved said.Denmark's military said soon afterwards that its vessels were staying close to Chinese bulk carrier Yi Peng 3, which travelled through the Baltic Sea at the time and now sits idle in international waters but inside Denmark's exclusive economic zone.
America’s Ports: A New Awakening [?]
Washington comes to grips with the reality that the domestic intermodal equation includes four modes. One of them is by water. It’s about time.One of the great things about spending five years in retirement (I mean, aside from being blissfully idle while you toiled) is that, when you do come back to work, you enjoy a truly fresh perspective in all aspects of your job. Not only does this provide new energy, more importantly, a half decade of change is much easier to discern. Nowhere is this more apparent than the state of American ports today.
Oil and Gas Output Trended High Before and After Trump
President-elect Donald Trump's support for the fossil fuel sector and climate scepticism have sparked dismay throughout the global climate tracking community, and fears that his policies may reverse global energy transition momentum.His campaign speeches included pledges to boost domestic oil and natural gas output and to remove mandates on electric vehicle production, but he has yet to publish many specific new energy policies.This lack of clarity has spurred despair among the climate community as it braces for the worst.But a look back at the trends across the U.S. energy landscape during Trump's first term suggests there could be some bright spots.
170 Arrested in Coal Ship Blockade
A climate change protest off the coast of Australia's New South Wales State forced an inbound ship to turn back from the country's largest terminal for coal exports on Sunday, the port operator said.New South Wales police said 170 protesters were arrested on Sunday for refusing to move from the shipping channel near the Port of Newcastle.The port, some 170 km (105 miles) from the state capital Sydney, is the largest bulk shipping port on Australia's east coast.A Port of Newcastle spokesperson said disruption due to the protest was "minimal" but that an inbound vessel "aborted due to people in the channel and has been rescheduled to come in".
As Subsea Comms Cable Security Comes to the Fore, FCC Mulls New Rules
The Federal Communications Commission voted 5-0 to propose new rules governing undersea internet cables in the face of growing security concerns in the wake of two fiber-optic undersea telecommunication cables being severed in the Baltic Sea this week, which is suspected to be sabotage.The FCC eyes new rules to address the national security concerns over the global network of more than 400 subsea cables that handle more than 98% of international internet traffic."With the expansion of data centers, rise of cloud computing, and increasing bandwidth demands of new large language models, these facilities are poised to grow even more critical," FCC Chair Jessica Rosenworcel said.