History | |
---|---|
Name: | Eversand |
Owner: | Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure |
Port of registry: | |
Builder: | Schichau Unterweser, Bremerhaven, Germany |
Yard number: | 2246 |
Laid down: | 12 December 1972 |
Launched: | 4 April 1973 |
Out of service: | 2012 |
Identification: |
|
Fate: | sold |
History | |
Name: | Eversand |
Operator: | |
Port of registry: | |
Yard number: | 2246 |
Acquired: | 2012 |
Identification: |
|
Status: | active |
General characteristics | |
Type: | buoy tender |
Tonnage: | 125.44 GRT |
Length: | 29.23 m |
Beam: | 6.12 m |
Draft: | 1.55 m |
Installed power: | 330 kW |
Propulsion: | 1 x KHD diesel engine |
Speed: | 10.5 knots |
Capacity: | 34 tdw |
Crew: | 5 |
Eversand is a support vessel in service with Van Laar Maritime in the North Sea. [1] It served most of its career for the Waterways and Shipping Authority of Bremerhaven, Germany.
The North Sea is a marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean located between Great Britain, Denmark, Norway, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and France. An epeiric sea on the European continental shelf, it connects to the ocean through the English Channel in the south and the Norwegian Sea in the north. It is more than 970 kilometres (600 mi) long and 580 kilometres (360 mi) wide, with an area of 570,000 square kilometres (220,000 sq mi).
Bremerhaven is a city at the seaport of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen, a state of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Germany, officially the Federal Republic of Germany, is a country in Central and Western Europe, lying between the Baltic and North Seas to the north and the Alps, Lake Constance, and the High Rhine to the south. It borders Denmark to the north, Poland and the Czech Republic to the east, Austria and Switzerland to the south, France to the southwest, and Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands to the west.
Eversand was laid down on 12 December 1972 at Schichau Unterweser AG in Bremerhaven, from where it was launched in 1973. It served laying and tending buoys about the mouth of the Weser. The ship also served to spray mudflats to assist in navigation. [2] [3]
The Weser is a river in Northwestern Germany. Formed at Hannoversch Münden by the confluence of the rivers Fulda and Werra, it flows through Lower Saxony, then reaching the Hanseatic city of Bremen, before emptying 50 km (31 mi) further north at Bremerhaven into the North Sea. On the opposite (west) bank is the town of Nordenham at the foot of the Butjadingen Peninsula; thus, the mouth of the river is in Lower Saxony. The Weser has an overall length of 452 km (281 mi). Together with its Werra tributary, which originates in Thuringia, its length is 744 km (462 mi).
The ship was decommissioned by the Waterways and Shipping Authority on 1 September 2012 and sold. It was replaced in service by the Nordergründe. [4]
The ship was acquired and serves as a support vessel for off-shore development with the Dutch company Van Laar Maritime. [5] [6]
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