Nuclear Icebreakers
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A nuclear-powered icebreaker is an icebreaker with an onboard nuclear power plant that produces power for the vessel's propulsion system. , Russia is the only country that builds and operates nuclear-powered icebreakers, having built a number of such vessels to aid shipping along the Northern Sea Route since the Soviet times. Nuclear-powered icebreakers are much more powerful than their diesel-powered counterparts. Although nuclear propulsion is expensive to install and maintain, very heavy fuel demands, limitations on range, and difficulty refueling in the Arctic region can make diesel vessels less practical and less economical overall for these ice-breaking duties. During the winter, the ice along the Northern Sea Route varies in thickness from . The ice in central parts of the Arctic Ocean is on average thick. Nuclear-powered icebreakers can force through this ice at speeds up to . In ice-free waters, the maximum speed of the nuclear-powered icebreakers is as much as .


Uses of nuclear-powered icebreakers

Russian s are used to force through the ice for the benefit of cargo ships and other vessels along the Northern Sea Route, which comprises the eastern part of the Barents Sea, the Pechora Sea, the Kara Sea, the Laptev Sea, and the Eastern Siberian Sea to the Bering Strait. Other important ports include Dikson, Tiksi, and
Pevek Pevek (russian: Певе́к; Chukchi: , ''Pèèkin'' / ''Pèèk'') is an Arctic port town and the administrative center of Chaunsky District in Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Russia, located on Chaunskaya Bay (part of the East Siberian Sea) on a peni ...
. Of six ''Arktika''-class icebreakers built in 1975–2007, two are currently in service. Two shallow-draft nuclear-powered icebreakers, ''Vaygach'' and ''Taymyr'', have been built for shallow waters and are usually used from the Yenisei River to Dikson, where they break through the ice followed by cargo ships with lumber from Igarka and cargo ships with ore and metals from the Norilsk Company's port in Dudinka. The icebreakers have also been used for a number of scientific expeditions in the Arctic. On August 17, 1977, was the first surface vessel in the world to reach the North Pole. Since 1989, some icebreakers have been used for Arctic tourist cruises.


Russian nuclear icebreakers

, twelve civilian nuclear-powered vessels have entered service in the USSR and Russia. Eleven of these are icebreakers, and one is a cargo ship with an icebreaking bow. All six nuclear-powered icebreakers of the ''Arktika'' class have been built at the Baltic Shipyard in St. Petersburg. ''Vaygach'' and ''Taymyr'' were built at the Helsinki New Shipyard in Finland and then brought to Russia for installation of the reactors and turbogenerators. In addition to icebreakers, the Soviet Union built a nuclear-powered ice-strengthened cargo ship '' Sevmorput''.


Classes


Vessels


Ships


''Lenin''

At its launch in 1957, ''Lenin'' was both the world's first nuclear-powered surface ship and the first nuclear-powered civilian vessel. ''Lenin'' was put into ordinary operation in 1959. ''Lenin'' had two nuclear accidents, the first in 1965, and the second in 1967. The second accident resulted in one of the three OK-150 reactors being damaged beyond repair. All three reactors were removed, and replaced by two OK-900 reactors; the ship returned to service in 1970. ''Lenin'' was taken out of operation in November 1989 and laid up at Atomflot, the base for nuclear-powered icebreakers, in the
Murmansk Fjord Kola Bay (russian: Кольский залив) or Murmansk Fjord is a 57-km-long fjord of the Barents Sea that cuts into the northern part of the Kola Peninsula. It is up to 7 km wide and has a depth of 200 to 300 metres. The Tuloma River, T ...
. Conversion to a
museum ship A museum ship, also called a memorial ship, is a ship that has been preserved and converted into a museum open to the public for educational or memorial purposes. Some are also used for training and recruitment purposes, mostly for the small numb ...
was scheduled to be completed .


''Arktika'' class

''Arktika'' class icebreakers, also known as Project 10520 nuclear-powered icebreakers, are the bulk of the Russian nuclear icebreaker fleet; six of Russia's ten nuclear civilian ships are ''Arktika''s. Since they have been built over a period of thirty years, ships of different classes vary among one another; thus specifications are listed as a range of values. In general, the newer ships are larger, faster, and require smaller crews. The first four of the class are retired, with two remaining in service . Specifications: *Length: 148 m to 159 m (approximately 136 m at the waterline) *Beam: 30 m (28 m at the waterline) *Draft: approximately 11.08 m. *Height (keel to masthead): approximately 55 m *Displacement: 23,000 to 25,000 tons *Maximum speed: 18 to 22 knots *Cruising speed: approximately 18 to 20 knots *Crew: 138 to over 200 *Passengers: approximately 100 *Reactors: 2 OK-900A, 171 megawatt each *Propulsion: 3 propellers totalling approximately 75,000 hp *Maximum ice thickness: 2 to 2.8 m *Endurance: 7.5 months at sea, 4 years between refuelings ''Arktika''-class icebreakers have a
double hull A double hull is a ship hull design and construction method where the bottom and sides of the ship have two complete layers of watertight hull surface: one outer layer forming the normal hull of the ship, and a second inner hull which is some dis ...
, with the outer hull being approximately 48 mm thick at the ice-breaking areas and 25 mm thick elsewhere. There is water ballast between the inner and outer hulls which can be shifted to aid icebreaking. Icebreaking is also assisted by an air bubbling system which can deliver 24 m3/s of air from jets 9 m below the surface. Some ships have polymer coated hulls to reduce friction. ''Arktika''-class ships can break ice while making way either forwards or backwards. Although they have two reactors, normally only one is used to provide power, with the other being maintained in a standby mode. Some ships carry one or two helicopters and several Zodiac boats. Radio and satellite systems can include navigation, telephone, fax, and email capabilities. Most nuclear-powered icebreakers in the Russian service today have a
swimming pool A swimming pool, swimming bath, wading pool, paddling pool, or simply pool, is a structure designed to hold water to enable Human swimming, swimming or other leisure activities. Pools can be built into the ground (in-ground pools) or built ...
, a sauna, a cinema, and a gymnasium. In the restaurants aboard there is a
bar Bar or BAR may refer to: Food and drink * Bar (establishment), selling alcoholic beverages * Candy bar * Chocolate bar Science and technology * Bar (river morphology), a deposit of sediment * Bar (tropical cyclone), a layer of cloud * Bar (u ...
and facilities for live music performances. Some also have a library and at least one has a volleyball court.


=Individual ships

= On 17 August 1977, ''Arktika'' ("Arctic") became the first surface ship ever to reach the North Pole. ''Arktika'' was withdrawn from service in 2008 after clocking up 175,000 hours of reactor operation time and covering more than 1 million nautical miles. Rather than be scrapped, there are calls for her to be converted to a museum ship, like her predecessor ''Lenin''. ''Sibir'' ("Siberia") ceased operation in 1992 and is awaiting scrapping. ''Rossiya'' ("Russia") carries two helicopters. ''Rossiya'' was used to transport an expedition of around 40 West Germans to the North Pole in the Summer of 1990; this may have been the first non-communist charter of a nuclear icebreaker.''Rossiya'' was in refit as of December 2004. ''Sovetskiy Soyuz'' ("Soviet Union") was trapped in ice for three days in 1998. In 2004, it was one of three icebreakers used for an Arctic
ice core An ice core is a core sample that is typically removed from an ice sheet or a high mountain glacier. Since the ice forms from the incremental buildup of annual layers of snow, lower layers are older than upper ones, and an ice core contains ic ...
expedition intended to research climate change and global warming. ''Yamal'' is mostly used for tourism and scientific expeditions. It has 50 passenger cabins and suites, and carries one helicopter. The crew is 150, including 50 officers and engineers. ''Yamal'' was the 12th surface ship ever to reach the North Pole. ''
50 Let Pobedy ''50 Let Pobedy'' (russian: 50 лет Победы; "50 Years of Victory", referring to the anniversary of victory of the Soviet Union in World War II) is a Russian nuclear-powered icebreaker. History Construction on project no. 10521 started ...
'' ("50 Years of Victory") is the final ''Arktika'' class ship. It was launched from the shipyard at Saint Petersburg on December 29, 1993, as ''Ural'', and delivered to Murmansk in 1994. It was later renamed and not actually completed and commissioned until 2006 due to funding delays. The crew is expected to normally number 138 persons. It has an environmental waste processing module added to the hull which accounts for 9 m of the ship's 159 m length; this makes it the largest of the ''Arktika'' class and the largest nuclear-powered icebreaker in the world. It carries two Ka-32 helicopters. It entered service on April 2, 2007.


''Taymyr'' class

''Taymyr'' and her sister ship, ''Vaygach'', were built at the Helsinki New Shipyard in Finland by Wärtsilä. The nuclear reactors were installed at the Leningrad Baltic Shipyard in the Soviet Union after delivery from Finland. Specifications: *Length: 150.2 m (''Taymyr''), 151.8 m (''Vaygach'') *Beam: 29.2 m *Draft: 8.0 m *Height: 15.2 m keel to main deck, 8 stories from main deck to bridge *Displacement: 20,000 tons *Speed: 18.5 knots *Crew: 120 to 138 *Reactors: One KLT-40M reactor producing 135 MW *Propulsion: 3 propellers totalling 52,000 hp The bow hull plating is approximately 32 mm thick.


Project 22220

Russia started building new icebreakers, Project 22220, in 2013. In June 2008 the head of the state nuclear corporation Rosatom, Sergei Kiriyenko, said "It is important to not only use the existing fleet of icebreakers, but also to build new ships, and the first nuclear icebreaker of a new generation will be built by 2015. This should be an icebreaker capable of moving in rivers and seas", he said. He went on saying that the
Iceberg Design Bureau An iceberg is a piece of freshwater ice more than 15 m long that has broken off a glacier or an ice shelf and is floating freely in open (salt) water. Smaller chunks of floating glacially-derived ice are called "growlers" or "bergy bits". Th ...
in St. Petersburg would prepare the design of the icebreaker by 2009. According to the BBC the
LK-60 Project 22220, also known through the Russian type size series designation LK-60Ya,The type size series designation "LK-60Ya" (russian: ЛК-60Я) comes from the Russian language word for "icebreaker" (russian: text=ледокол, translit=ledo ...
(ЛК60Я) will be the biggest nuclear-powered icebreaker that was ever built. Sergei Kiriyenko, head of the state nuclear corporation Rosatom ordered the responsible operator Atomflot to build up to three nuclear icebreakers until 2016. The construction of a nuclear-powered icebreaker takes eight years, the fuel endurance is about 25 years and the reactor can be refueled. According to the Transport Ministry, Russia needs six new icebreakers in the future. In October 2020, the first Project 22220 icebreaker, a new vessel named '' Arktika'', completed sea trials and began operations in Arctic waters. The second (''Sibir'') began sea trials in November 2021.


Infrastructure

Support facilities include the fuel transports ''Imandra'' and ''Lotta'' which are used for refuelling and spent fuel. ''Volodarsky'' is used for storage of solid waste; it can hold 300 cubic meters. ''Serebryanka'' is a tanker used for liquid waste which can hold 1,000 cubic meters of material. ''Rosta-1'' boat is used for radiation monitoring and control, including sanitization of workers. A third fuel vessel, , is filled with spent nuclear fuel elements, many of them damaged and thus difficult to handle. The vessel was used for dumping of nuclear waste in the
Barents Barents may refer to: *René Barents (born 1951), Dutch judge and legal scholar *Willem Barents (c. 1550–1597), Dutch navigator and explorer *Barents AirLink, a Swedish airline *Barents Island (), an island in the Svalbard archipelago, part of ...
and Kara Seas from 1963 to 1984. During a dumping operation in 1984, ''Lepse'' encountered very rough seas, and high-level reactor waste mixed with water was splashed all over the inside of the cargo compartment. The contamination was so severe that the crew were forced to immediately return to port at the Atomflot harbor with most of the nuclear waste still in the hold. The ship was immediately recognized as being far too dangerous to decontaminate and return to service, and has been essentially abandoned with a cargo hold full of leaking spent reactor fuel vessels, staying in the harbor for over 15 years. A small crew monitored the ship on a constant basis while Russia tried to raise the money and perform the research needed for safe disposal. In September 2012 ''Lepse'' was removed from the Atomflot harbor and transported to the Nerpa shipyard where it will be carefully scrapped. In October 2020, the last container with spent nuclear fuel was removed from ''Lepse''. In all, about 2,000 people work aboard the icebreakers, the nuclear-powered container ship, and aboard the service and storage ships stationed at the Atomflot harbour. The crew on the civil nuclear-powered vessels receive special training at the Makarov college in St. Petersburg, Russia. Icebreakers generally try to navigate paths with the least possible ice in order to make speedier progress and to help ensure that they do not become trapped in ice too thick for them to break. In the 1970s and 1980s, land-based aircraft would observe and map the ice to help with course plotting. Over time, most of this work has been taken over by satellite surveillance systems, sometimes aided by the helicopters carried by the icebreakers.


Arctic tourism

Since 1989 the nuclear-powered icebreakers have also been used for tourist purposes carrying passengers to the North Pole. Each participant pays up to US$25,000 for a cruise lasting three weeks. ''Sibir'' was used for the first two tourist cruises in 1989 and 1990. In 1991 and 1992, the tourist trips to the North Pole were undertaken by ''Sovetskiy Soyuz''. During the summer of 1993 ''Yamal'' was used for three tourist expeditions in the Arctic. ''Yamal'' has a separate accommodation section for tourists. The nuclear-powered icebreaker ''
50 Let Pobedy ''50 Let Pobedy'' (russian: 50 лет Победы; "50 Years of Victory", referring to the anniversary of victory of the Soviet Union in World War II) is a Russian nuclear-powered icebreaker. History Construction on project no. 10521 started ...
'' contains an accommodation deck customized for tourists. Quark Expeditions chartered ''50 Let Pobedy'' for expeditions to the North Pole in 2008. The vessel's maiden voyage to the North Pole embarked in Murmansk, on June 24, 2008. The ship carried 128 guests in 64 cabins in five categories. ''50 Let Pobedy'' completed a total of three expeditions to the North Pole in 2008 for the polar adventure company. As of February 2013, Quark Expeditions was listing ''50 Let Pobedy'' in the company fleet and offering it for a North Pole cruise.


See also

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References


External links


Gallery of Russian nuclear icebreakersThe Nuclear icebreaker fleet
- on Rosatom official site
Pravda: Russia Builds World's Biggest Nuclear IcebreakerTechnical information
MSCO
Presentation on Safety of Current Russian Nuclear Facilities
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* {{DEFAULTSORT:Nuclear Powered Icebreaker Ship types Icebreakers Russian inventions Transport in the Arctic