Slow progress, huge budget overrun for Rosatomflot’s lider-class icebreaker

On Monday, online followers could see how a new module was lifted into the hull of what will be the world’s largest icebreaker. Construction is taking place at the Zvezda shipyard in the town of Bolshoy Kamen near Vladivostok. An oil-platform is behind the icebreaker hull. (Screenshot from Rosatomflot webcam)

Sluggish progress and massive budget overrun have characterised the four years that have past since Rosatomflot gave go-ahead for the first Lider-class nuclear powered icebreaker.

Watching the live webcam has, to put it mildly, been tedious. April 23 marks four years since the contract was signed by Rosatomflot in Murmansk and the Zvezda shipyard in Bolshoi Kamen near Vladivostok.

Not much progress has been made since 2020.

The contract said the icebreaker is to be commissioned by 2027. That, however, will not happen.

Only a few tens of meters to the lower decks of what will be the hull of the giant vessel is in place, the webcam at the shipyard shows.

Moscow’s war against Ukraine is part of the reason for slow progress.

Hull casting and mounting arms, as well as other equipment, was originally to be delivered by the company Energomashspetsstal in the Ukrainian city of Kramatorsk in 2022. That plant was destroyed by Russian bombing in April 2022. Zvezda yard had to start looking for alternative suppliers.

New tenders 

Russia’s public portal for purchases has recently announced nine tenders for equipments, metal structures and pipes for the icebreaker with a total value of more than 2,2 billion rubles (€22 million). Russian companies are invited to provide offers to the tenders with deadline now in April.

Although many new domestic suppliers and full speed ahead for construction, it is still unclear when the new icebreaker will be commissioned and can start sailings.

The 120 MW nuclear-powered icebreaker that is named Rossiya will be the largest icebreaker in the world. Capable of crashing through 4 meter thick ice, it shall keep the eastern part of Russia’s Northern Sea Route open for LNG carriers all year round.

Rosatomflot’s current fleet of Project 22220 icebreakers have a beam of 34 meters, while the new Rossiya will be nearly 48 meters at its widest point. That makes a big difference when escorting ships across the most difficult parts of heavy ice mid-winter.

Rossiya will be equipped with two RITM-400 reactors providing twice the power compared with the Project 22220 icebreakers.

Rosatomflot has its home port just north of Murmansk in the Kola Bay. Here, maintenance and changing of nuclear fuel rods take place.

Originally three icebreakers of the Lider-class were supposed to be built. Today, funding and practical challenges show that Russia has more than enough with the first.

Related stories from around the North: 

Canada: Canadian government promises coast guard two new heavy icebreakers for Arctic operations, CBC News

Russia: Moscow cuts funding for icebreakers, The Independent Barents Observer

United States: U.S. Department of Defense stresses need for more icebreakers in the Arctic, Eye on the Arctic

Thomas Nilsen, The Independent Barents Observer

For more news from the Barents region visit The Independent Barents Observer.

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