General information

IMO:
9113135
MMSI:
620999091
Callsign:
D6A3096
Width:
21.0 m
Length:
127.0 m
Deadweight:
Gross tonnage:
TEU:
Liquid Capacity:
Year of build:
Class:
AIS type:
Other Ship
Ship type:
Flag:
Comoros
Builder:
Owner:
Operator:
Insurer:

Course/Position

Position:
Navigational status:
Moving
Course:
253.4° / 0.0
Heading:
247.0° / 0.0
Speed:
Max speed:
Status:
moving
Area:
Mediterranean Sea
Last seen:
2024-03-09
41 days ago
Source:
T-AIS
From:
Destination:
ETA:
Summer draft:
Current draft:
Last update:
31 days ago
Source:
T-AIS
Calculated ETA:

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Latest ports

Port
Arrival
Departure
Duration
2023-04-03
2023-04-15
11d 19h 50m
2020-06-04
2020-06-05
19h 57m
2020-01-08
2020-03-08
60d 9h 41m
2019-12-27
2020-01-03
6d 20h 58m
2019-12-18
2019-12-27
8d 23h 50m
2017-02-06
2017-02-09
2d 16h 39m
2017-02-03
2017-02-06
3d 1h 10m
2017-01-29
2017-02-03
4d 21h 47m
2017-01-28
2017-01-29
1d 1h 41m
2017-01-17
2017-01-18
1d 5h 12m
Note: All times are in UTC

Latest Waypoints

Waypoints
Time
Direction
Port Said
2024-02-09
Leave
Suez
2024-02-09
Leave
Jeddah North
2024-02-08
Leave
Jeddah North
2024-01-29
Enter
Suez
2024-01-25
Enter
Port Said
2024-01-25
Enter
Port Said
2023-07-03
Leave
Note: All times are in UTC

Latest news

Allision off Kandla

Fri Mar 23 10:07:41 CET 2018 Timsen

While leaving the Kandla port, Gujarat, enroute to Suez, the cargo m/v "Pac Seginus"(IMO: 9443358), was in allision with the anchored "Nautical Global XVI" - which was in cold layup - on Kandla OTB anchorage - on March 22, 2018, at 05.15 a.m. The tanker lost its port side anchor and went adrift, having a close call with the anchored tanker "Tiger Integrity" (IMO: 9760574) before being brought under control and anchored again. Apart from the lost anchor she also suffered ballast tank damages. The cargo vessel was anchored near the collision site after the accident.

Sailor stranded on tanker for months due to pay dispute tries to jump overboard

Thu May 18 11:23:35 CEST 2017 arnekiel

Thirty-four Indian sailors and four Pakistani crew have been stranded aboard two oil tankers for more than two months off the coast of Kandla, in west India, because of unpaid wages and a legal dispute between ship owners and a UAE chartering company. One sailor tried to jump into the sea on Tuesday distressed that he had not sent money home because he had not been paid for six months. Rations ran so low last week that the captains of Nautical Global VII and Nautical Global XVI made SOS calls to the Kandla port authority pleading for food and water. Both tankers were “arrested”, or restricted to the area, on February 27 by an Indian court order after a maritime claim for damages was filed by the chartering company Nautical Global Ship Management, based in Dubai, against Ajman-based owners Gulf Shipping Services. “The man was suffering because he talks to his daughter who is crying because there is no food to eat and he thinks, ‘What is the use of being alive if I can’t take care of a small child?’ He was ready to jump when an alarm was raised and we reached him in time to talk to him,” said Capt Suchittar Kumar Sharma, of Nautical Global XVI, from anchorage about 15 nautical miles from Kandla. http://www.hellenicshippingnews.com/sailor-stranded-on-tanker-for-months-due-to-pay-dispute-tries-to-jump-overboard/

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Daily average speed

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Distance travelled

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Ship master data