Histria Tiger

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Name: Histria Tiger
Owner: Histria Shipmanagement
Port of registry: Monrovia, Template:LBR
Ordered: 2006
Builder: Constanţa Shipyard
Yard number: 574
Launched: 2008
Completed: 2008
In service: 2008
General characteristics
Class and type: Oil tanker
Tonnage: 40,416 tons
Length: 179.96 metres (590.4 ft)
Beam: 32.2 metres (106 ft)
Draft: 11 metres (36 ft)
Depth: 16.5 metres (54 ft)
Installed power: 12,360 kilowatts (16,580 hp)
Speed: 15 knots (17 mph)
Capacity: 47,803 m3
Crew: Romanian

Histria Tiger is a floating storage and offloading unit (FPSO) owned by the Romanian shipping company Histria Shipmanagement and is registered in Monrovia, Liberia.[1][2]

History

Histria Tiger was built by the Constanţa Shipyard in 2008 as a 40,416 DWT ship used for the transportation of oil and oil products and chemical products.[2] The ship is chartered by the Italian oil and natural gas company Eni.[2]

Technical description

The Histria Tiger is equipped with a double hull, one two-stroke acting diesel engine MAN B&W 6S50MC-C with a capacity of 9,480 kilowatts (12,710 hp) directly acting on the propeller shaft and a four-bladed fixed propeller built by Wärtsilä Propulsion Netherlands.[2] It also has another three auxiliary MAN B&W 6L23/30H diesel engines with a capacity of 960 kilowatts (1,290 hp) each.[2] The ship has 14 hydraulically-driven centrifugal deepwell Framo cargo pumps, 10 pumps with a capacity of 500 m3/hour, two pumps with a capacity of 200 m3/hour, one pump with a capacity of 100 m3/hour and one portable pump with a capacity of 150 m3/hour.[2]

The ship is equipped with five manifolds, a discharge capacity of 3,000 m3/hour, a cargo handling capacity of 3,750 m3/hour, one Liebherr hose-handling crane with a reach of 22 metres (72 ft), an Alfa Lawal JWSP-26-C100 freshwater conversion plant with a capacity of 30 m3/day and a Jowa Bio STP3 sewage-treatment plant capable of sustaining 34 people.[2] The ship has ten cargo tanks, two tanks with a capacity of 3,550 m3, four tanks with a capacity of 4,900 m3, four tanks with a capacity of 5,100 m3 and two slop tanks with a capacity of 1,000 m3.[2]

References