Maritime Vessels Directory
Filters
- Type
- Flag
- Australia (1)
- Bahamas (2)
- Cayman Islands (2)
- Cyprus (11)
- Denmark (1)
- Greece (3)
- Liberia (2)
- Malta (14)
- Marshall Islands (7)
- Norway (13)
- Republic of Liberia (1)
- Republic of Malta (1)
- Republic of Marshall Islands (1)
- Republic of Singapore (2)
- Singapore (2)
- United Kingdom (2)
- Port
- Companies
- Ancora Investment Trust Inc. (1)
- Avanti Shipping Co. (1)
- B. Advance Shipping Co. Ltd. (1)
- B. Ambition Shipping Co. Ltd (1)
- B. Marshall Shipping Co. Ltd. (1)
- B. Merchant Shipping Co. Ltd. (1)
- B. Monarch Shipping Co., Ltd. (1)
- Bae Systems Marine Ltd. (3)
- Baltic Mariner Shipping Company Limited (1)
- Bingle Marine S.A. (1)
- BP Shipping Ltd. (2)
- Celebrity Shipping Limited (1)
- Columbia Shipmanagement (Deutschland) GmbH (4)
- Hyundai Mipo Dockyard Co., Ltd. (42)
- International Tanker Management (Germany) GmbH (2)
- Interorient Marine Services (Germany) GmbH & Co. KG (11)
- Interorient Marine Services Ltd. (2)
- National Chemical Carriers Ltd. Co. (3)
- Newlead Shipping S.A. (2)
- Odfjell (UK) Limited (2)
- Odfjell Asia II Pte. Ltd. (9)
- Odfjell Chemical Tankers AS (5)
- Odfjell Management AS (8)
- OSM Ship Management GmbH (3)
- Scorpio Ship Management S.A.M. (3)
- Stolt Tankers B.V. (2)
- Super-Eco Tankers Management Inc. (3)
- Thenamaris Ships Management Inc. (5)
- Tsakos Columbia Shipmanagement (TCM) S.A. (2)
- Westcon Yard Florø AS (13)
- Year
- Gross Tonnage
- 23190 (3)
- 23196 - 23197 (9)
- 23204 (1)
- 23206 (4)
- 23217 (10)
- 23224 (1)
- 23232 (1)
- 23235 - 23236 (22)
- 23240 - 23241 (14)
ELBTANK DENMARK
Oil Carrier | Flag: Republic of Liberia | Port: MONROVIA
FATIH
Bulk Carrier | Flag: Republic of Malta | Port: VALLETTA
OCEAN VICTORY
Oil Carrier | Flag: Republic of Singapore | Port: SINGAPORE
OCEAN WINNER
Oil Carrier | Flag: Republic of Singapore | Port: SINGAPORE
SEA DOLPHIN C
Bulk Carrier | Flag: Republic of Marshall Islands | Port: MAJURO
Maritime News
White House Expected to Extend Jones Act Waiver
The White House is expected to extend the Jones Act waiver for up to 90 days as early as Friday to help blunt fuel price pressures tied to the Iran conflict, according to two sources familiar with the decision.The move would temporarily ease requirements that goods transported between U.S. ports be carried on American-built and American-crewed vessels, allowing foreign-flagged ships to move fuel and other key commodities more freely as the administration seeks to contain energy market disruptions from the war and tensions in the Strait of Hormuz.A White House official told Reuters the extension is under consideration, but declined to comment on the length and timing of any announcement.
Why security planning matters in modern dredging and port works
Security is all too often treated as a purely compliance-driven exercise. This isn’t advisable in any industry, but it is particularly damaging for those that fall under critical infrastructure frameworks. Ports, and, by extension, the dredging operations that maintain and expand shipping lanes, are the backbone of global trade, underpinning essential supply lines. Security threats and workplace distributions therefore carry repercussions that extend far beyond any individual location, and facilitate a response that goes beyond passive monitoring and reactive measures.
US Intercepts Three Iranian Tankers in Asian Waters
The U.S. military has intercepted at least three Iranian-flagged tankers in Asian waters and is redirecting them away from their positions near India, Malaysia and Sri Lanka, shipping and security sources said on Wednesday.Washington has imposed a blockade on Iran's trade by sea while Iran has fired on ships to prevent them sailing through the Strait of Hormuz waterway at the entrance to the Middle East Gulf. Nearly two months after the U.S. and Israel began their war on Iran, there is little sign of peace talks resuming during an uneasy ceasefire.The closure of the strait has disrupted supply of a fifth of the world's oil and gas supplies, and caused a global energy crisis. U.S.
Iran Detains Two Container Ships for Maritime Violations
Iran said it had captured two container ships seeking to exit the Gulf via the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday after firing on them and another vessel, in its first seizures since its war with the United States and Israel began in February.Iran's semi-official Tasnim news agency reported the seizures and added its Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy had warned that any disruption to order and safety in the strait would be considered a "red line."The seizure of one of the ships, the Panama-flagged MSC Francesca, was confirmed by Montenegro's minister of maritime affairs, who said four Montenegrin seafarers were on board and that they and the rest of the crew were safe.
Three Ships Fired Upon in Strait of Hormuz, Crews Unharmed
At least three container ships were hit by gunfire in the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday, maritime security sources and the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said.Iran has imposed restrictions on ships using the strait, first in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeli bombardment of the country, and then in response to a U.S. blockade of Iranian ports.A Liberia-flagged container ship sustained damage to its bridge after being hit by gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades northeast of Oman.The UKMTO said the master of the vessel reported being approached by an IRGC gunboat. The vessel, it said, was subsequently fired upon.