Maritime Vessels Directory

3180 - 3199.5(x) (1-20 of 21) clear

Filters

Type
Flag
Port
Companies
Year
Gross Tonnage

APSCO 4

Tanker for Oil Products | Flag: Saudi Arabia | Port: JEDDAH

BRØVIG VIENTO

Tanker for Oil and Chemicals | Flag: Gibraltar | Port: GIBRALTAR

CHESAPEAKE

Tank Barge | Flag: United States of America | Port: PHILADELPHIA, PA

DELAWARE

Tank Barge | Flag: United States of America | Port: PHILADELPHIA, PA

GREENWOOD TIDE

Offshore Support Vessel | Flag: Mexico | Port: ISLA DEL CARMEN

HERCULES 150

Self Elevating Unit | Flag: Republic of Liberia | Port: MONROVIA

JASCON 51

Barge | Flag: Saint Vincent and The Grenadines | Port: Kingstown

OCEAN AMBER

Offshore Support Vessel | Flag: India | Port: MUMBAI

OCEAN SAPPHIRE

Offshore Support Vessel | Flag: India | Port: MUMBAI

SAL DRACO

Tank Barge | Flag: Republic of Singapore | Port: SINGAPORE

SK LINE 1

Chemical Carrier | Flag: Republic of Singapore | Port: SINGAPORE

SKANDI ATLANTIC

Supply Vessel | Flag: Norway | Port: BERGEN

SKANDI CHIEFTAIN

Supply Vessel | Flag: Norway | Port: BERGEN

SKANDI EMERALD

Supply Vessel | Flag: Bahamas | Port: NASSAU

SKANDI HAV

Supply Vessel | Flag: Panama | Port: PANAMA

SKANDI PACIFIC

Supply Vessel | Flag: Bahamas | Port: NASSAU

SKANDI PEREGRINO

Supply Vessel Anchor Hand.Fire Fight | Flag: Norway | Port: BERGEN

SKANDI SAIGON

Supply Vessel | Flag: Norway | Port: BERGEN

STIM STAR III

Offshore Support Vessel | Flag: United States of America | Port: Galliano, LA

SUN BIRD

General Cargo (single deck) | Flag: Antigua and Barbuda | Port: ST. JOHN'S

  • 1
  • 2

Maritime News

ADNOC LNG Tanker Crosses Strait of Hormuz

ADNOC LNG Tanker Crosses Strait of Hormuz

11 hours ago
An LNG tanker managed by UAE's ADNOC has crossed the Strait of Hormuz and appears to be near India, ship-tracking data showed on Monday.If confirmed, this will be the first loaded LNG tanker to cross the strait since the Iran war started on February 28. Adnoc did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.The 136,357-cubic-meter tanker, which is managed by Adnoc Logistics & Services and was last seen in the Gulf on March 30, has shown up off the west coast of India, suggesting it has crossed the Strait of Hormuz after several weeks without signal, according to data from ICIS LNG Edge, Marine Traffic and LSEG.
US Government Scraps Two Offshore Wind Leases for Fossil Fuel Investment Pledge

US Government Scraps Two Offshore Wind Leases for Fossil Fuel Investment Pledge

14 hours ago
President Donald Trump's administration said on Monday that it had reached a deal to end two more U.S. offshore wind leases in exchange for $885 million in pledged investments in domestic fossil fuels.The projects, one in the Atlantic and one in the Pacific, are managed by Ocean Winds, a joint venture between France's ENGIE and Portugal's EDP Renewables.The announcement comes a month after French energy giant TotalEnergies reached a similar agreement with the Interior Department to redirect $1 billion from offshore wind leases to U.S. oil and gas production. The deals represent a new strategy in Trump's effort to stymie U.S.
US Intercepts Sanctioned Tanker in Arabian Sea

US Intercepts Sanctioned Tanker in Arabian Sea

2 days ago
U.S. Central Command said it intercepted a merchant vessel trying to get through the blockade of Iran on Saturday.The ship, identified as the Sevan, was part of a 19-vessel "shadow fleet" transporting Iranian oil and gas products to foreign markets, the U.S. military said.Central Command said it was intercepted in the Arabian Sea by a U.S. Navy helicopter from the guided-missile destroyer USS Pinckney and was "currently complying with U.S. military direction to turn back to Iran under escort."The “shadow fleet” vessels have been sanctioned by the U.S.
White House Expected to Extend Jones Act Waiver

White House Expected to Extend Jones Act Waiver

4 days ago
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

Why security planning matters in modern dredging and port works

4 days ago
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.
Maritime Reporter and Engineering News (April 2026)
Maritime Reporter and Engineering News (April 2026)