Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

Brazilian Supertanker

Monday, 17th October 2005 by Alex

Please note that some or all of the objects mentioned in this post are no longer visable on Google Earth or Google Maps.

Here’s a totally awesome image of an enormous supertanker speeding along just off the coast of Rio de Janeiro. Only ships above 250,000 tonnes are considered true supertankers, and due to their massive size and weight, their stopping distances are generally measured in miles. They’re also capable of carrying around two million barrels of oil.

It all seems completely unbelievable somehow, and yet Wikipedia tells us it’s true

Thanks to Gus.

36 Responses to 'Brazilian Supertanker'

Pages: [1] 2 »

  1. 1. martin says:

    I think you managed to find the Berge Stahl (Mountains of Steel), a superhuge iron ore tanker. It draws 75 feet (almost 23m) and can only dock in 2 ports in the world.

    http://www.machinesupport.com/english/news-6.html

  2. 2. martin says:

    addendum: wikipedia has it listed as the largest bulk cargo ship:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulk_cargo

  3. 3. kjfitz says:

    I don’t think its the Berge Stahl. The deck hatches on this one are not as pronounced as these in this picture:

    http://www.noordzee.org/Images/4_1868.jpg

    And the flyimg wings off the supersructure extend quite a bit less on the Berge Stahl than the one captured in the Google images.

    http://www.machinesupport.com/english/news-6-01.html

  4. 4. gIMpSTa says:

    I watched a show on discovery channel about engineering a floating (ship) city. They said it would weigh 300 million tonnes. At a rather slow 10 knots it would take 5 miles to stop they said.

    *hope this isn’t to off-topic*

  5. 5. gIMpSTa says:

    http://www.freedomship.com/

    Should have googled it before to have just one post, but a URL for anyone interested.

  6. 6. Jesus says:

    Wow, that’s just nearly as big as the island just to the north of it. An ISLAND. Whoa. Come to Jesus.

    I heard about the Freedom Ship a long time ago. Sounds awesome! But I’ll pass on it until it’s sunk once. Then they’ll fix everything they should’ve fixed before it launched.

  7. 7. Satya says:

    I’ve been aboard Berge Boss and my father sailed aboard her and (I think) Jahre Viking (see http://www.tribuneindia.com/1999/99jul11/sunday/head3.htm and also see wikipedia). Berge Boss was also a supertanker. I don’t remember them being that big, though.

    Oh according to Wikipedia, Knock Nevis *is* Jahre Viking. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jahre_Viking

  8. 8. Smurf says:

    This thing is really impressive - although I would be very curious to find out which tanker it really is.

    I think it has been established that it is not the above mentioned Berge Stahl nor the Knock Nevis / Jahre Viking. The Knock Nevis is can be found on Google Maps here: Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

    So, the hunt is on: Who is the baby?

  9. 9. Niek Bergboer says:

    The oil tanker seems to be about 275m (900ft) in length. The one I found is not on oil tanker, but a HUGE 290 m (950 ft) container carrier:

    [http://maps.google.com/maps?q=&ll=51.901745,4.430006&z=0&t=k&hl=en](http://maps.google.com/maps?q=&ll=51.901745,4.430006&z=0&t=k&hl=en)

  10. 10. kjfitz says:

    Here is an identical tanker in Halifax.

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  11. 11. aa says:

    funny that super tanker in halifax shows up on google maps but in google earht is a different photo date as the ship is not there!

    Here is a ST near istanbul it shows up in google earth too which lets you see a better resolution you can see the helicopter landing pad on the deck

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  12. 12. Geert says:

    I don’t think it is the Berge Stahl. In fact, i don’t even think it is a dry bulk carrier. A dry bulk carrier has lateral hatches along his lenght. This tanker has something in his middle running across the whole length: i think this is an oil tanker, and in the middle are pipelines (maybe LNG tanker).

    Using the mease tools of google, i have come to the following dimensions:
    Length: 275-276 metres
    Widht: 47 metres

    These dimensions do not match those of the Berge Stahl.

    Also the sattelite photo has been taken in the year 2005, but i did not find any more specific time details (day ??)

    The red color points to Berge as builder/owner.

    Also the Helicopter pad is clearly to the left, not in the middle, but somehow more to the front.

    A great site about super-tankers can be found here:

    http://supertankers.topcities.com/

    but i have’t found a match -yet-

  13. 13. commander says:

    burge shtil is over 330 meters in length and almost 65 meters wide, displacing 370,000 tonnes and crewed by a crew of 30

    i have worked on similar ships not nearly as big but i do know that it does take miles to stop also burge shtill is not a oil tanker she carrys iron ore pellets her name means “mountain of iron”

    regards

  14. 14. Shiplawyer says:

    Hi,

    The tanker on the picture is a standard 300.000 dwt (deadewight ton = carrying capacity) crude oil tanker. This one has probably delivered oil from the Middle East or West Africa to Brazil.

    Since tankers have become very standardised over the years, it is difficult to tell which one this is. Large tankers these days are usually either 300.000 dwt (2 million barrels of oil), 150.000 dwt (1 million barrels) or 100.000 dwt (700.000 barrels), since these are the lots usually shipped by the oil exporters.

    The vessel is not an ore carrier, like Berge Stahl is. By the way, the name “Berge Stahl” may not be too different from the way “mountains of steel” is written in German. However, its Norwegian shipowner Bergesen (now part of Bergesen WorldWide) names all their ships with the prefix “Berge”, for instance “Berge Big” and “Berge Boss”. The Suffix “Stahl” means steel in German and was a tribute to its German charterer, but the suffice Berge is simply derived from the shipowner’s name.

    Best regards
    Mats
    Oslo, Norway

  15. 15. Peter de Haan says:

    It’s a standard VLCC (very large crude carrier). I have first calibrated the measure of google earth to something of a known length. If you look in the port of Rio you’ll find the aircraft carrier Sao Paulo (former Foch) it’s maximal length is 860 feet. The measure measures it at 861 feet, so it’s accurate. Measuring the VLCC you get a length of around 280m and a beam of 47m. That will calculate roughly to a DWT of 230.000. Looking at the config of the upper deck I would say it’s made by Hyundai South Korea. My guess it is a shuttle carrier between the Campos basin oilfields and the São Sebastião oil terminal at the São Paulo port.

    It will difficult to identify because it is a standard carrier and not a very big one (small VLCC)

  16. 16. Peter de Haan says:

    Found on the internet that Teekay shipping (www.teekay.com) delivered two shuttle tankers to the PetroBras oil company. When you look on their website you will see that most of their shuttle tankers almost perfectly match the dimensions of the “mystery tanker”. Teekay tankers also have a red upperdeck with same configuration. So for now I would put my money on a Teekay (owned or delivered) shuttle tanker. I will try to put a name to her…

  17. 17. Peter de Haan says:

    My educated guess would be “MT Nordic Brasilia” Shuttle tanker between Campos Basin and Sao Paulo. The ship didn’t leave the port of Rio, it doesn’t comply with its location on the photo. BTW Rio port doesn’t have a dedicated oil terminal, Sao Paulo has. The location of the ship and direction of the ship could logical for a heading towards the Campos Basin.

  18. 18. SLR says:

    ive found that one… but its not what we looking for, right?

    http://froogle.google.com/local?f=q&hl=en&q=rhode+island&ll=-22.870111,-43.208204&spn=0.002714,0.004302&t=h

  19. 19. Peter de Haan says:

    SLR,

    I don’t know which ship you’ve found, but it’s not the Nordic Brasilia or Nordic Rio. The beam of the ship in the drydock is around 52 meters. The Brasilia and rio are “SuezMax” tankers which are usually less than 50 meters.

    http://www.teekay.com/index.aspx?page=vessel_details&imo=9274513

  20. 20. SLR says:

    dunno, but this is bigger that all floating ones which i found somewhere else in the world… spc. in singapure :/

  21. 21. Peter de Haan says:

    SLR,

    You’ve found a VLCC type carrier. And by the looks of it it is being converted to a FSO (floating storage offloading).

  22. 22. Peter de Haan says:

    You have to know where to look for big floating ones… Try the persian gulf
    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  23. 23. Peter de Haan says:

    Keppel singapore is also building three 300m+ VLCC

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  24. 24. SLR says:

    keep searching @ mexico gulf :)

  25. 25. SLR says:

    check out
    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  26. 26. SLR says:

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  27. 27. Hayo says:

    I’m sorry, but this is not the MS ‘Berge Stahl’. The hatches are different and the helicopter landing spot (for harbour-pilots) is not in the right place (on the BS the H-landing spot is on one of the middle-hatches). The bridge is different too (also the color is something ‘greenish’ on the BS). I’ve often seen the BS in Europoort, Rotterdam, flying pilots to and from the ship (I’m a pilot-pilot). Rotterdam is one of the two harbours in the world where the BS can dock. It docks here about 10 times a year. It’s an amazing ship with an extra-ordinary size and handling. It has to slow down even before entering the ‘Northsea Channel’, somewhere around Cherbourg, France. Then it still has to pass the country of Belgium and the south of Holland. Still an amazing ship though I’ve seen it many times!

  28. 28. Arjun says:

    Indeed this is not the Berge Stahl. I have been searching for the big ships of the world and am happy to have found and identified 3 so far. Including the Stahl.

    I first thought that the gigantic bulk ship in Europoort (one of the 2 ports Berge Stahl docks at) was indeed the Berge Stahl. But measurments with the ruler and comparrison with photographs resulted in a smaller, but still giant ship. I identified it as the Berge Pacific. Other information on websites (from spotters and fan sites) confirmed that. So that set me on the quest of finding the Berge Stahl. The other port this ship docks at is the one near the northern-brasilian city of Sao Luis. Just west of the city you will find a huge ore plant en several ships docked. However the Stahl was still a mystery. I was hoping it wasn’t on its journy in the middle of the atlantic. But luckily i found some ships in the blurry waters (google earth has no clear view of this) a little bit north of Sao Luis. They are obviously waiting for space at the iron ore terminal. One of these, the largest, has the perfect measurements. Around 343 meters in length and around 65 meters in width. Same as the measurements of the Berge Stahl! This is with no doubt this remarkable ship!

    I have also been looking for the Emma Maersk, but she is still not spotted by me. I found numerous container vessels larger than 300meters in lenth. However i found 3 contaner ships off around 340-350 meters in length. They all could be the S-series from Maersk One spotted in Singapore, one in Hong Kong and most clear of all the one in Yokohama, Japan. You can read: Maersk Sealand very clearly on the blue side of the ship. I am almost sure it’s the Albert Maersk but i can be wrong. All three are most probably from Maersk. But who knows. It’s very hard to tell from above.

    Thanks and have fun spotting! Perhaps you can help me spot the Jahre :P I failed in doing so!

  29. 29. Ilpo Järvinen says:

    Hello,

    Has anyone seen Knock Nevis in Google Earth lately? If someone has could he give me coordinates or link, cause I haven’t seen it at all. :(

  30. 30. Jonathan says:

    Placemark: Possibly Berge Stahl? / Google Earth

  31. 31. Jonathan says:

    Nevermind, just read Arjun’s post a little more closely. Happy hunting!

  32. 32. Mark Tom says:

    Knock Nevis is outside Quatar, it’s converted from a bulkcarrier to a FPSO

  33. 33. P_S_B says:

    There are two very large tankers docked in the Dubai port and another equally large one on the way into port. Does anybody know which tankers those are?

    Google Maps = Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  34. 34. Nick says:

    True, Knock Nevis is somewhere in Qatar not in Rotterdam. This placemark is wrong, Knock Nevis is a tanker. The ship pictured there is a bulk carrier…..

  35. 35. Jason says:

    I’m looking for technical blueprints for a supertanker or bulk carrier. Can anybody help me locate these?

    Thanks,
    Jason

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