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Sea and coastal water transport (cargo, tanker and tugboat)

An oil tanker, also known as a petroleum tanker, is a ship designed for the bulk transport of oil. There are two basic types of oil tankers: the crude tanker and the product tanker. Crude tankers move large quantities of unrefined crude oil from its point of extraction to refineries. Product tankers, generally much smaller, are designed to move petrochemicals from refineries to points near consuming markets.

Oil tankers are often classified by their size as well as their occupation. The size classes range from inland or coastal tankers of a few thousand metric tons of deadweight (DWT) to the mammoth ultra large crude carriers (ULCCs) of 550,000 DWT. Tankers move approximately 2,000,000,000 metric tons (2.2×10 short tons) of oil every year. Second only to pipelines in terms of efficiency, the average cost of oil transport by tanker amounts to only two or three United States cents per 1 US gallon (3.8 L).

Some specialized types of oil tankers have evolved. One of these is the naval replenishment oiler, a tanker which can fuel a moving vessel. Combination ore-bulk-oil carriers and permanently moored floating storage units are two other variations on the standard oil tanker design. Oil tankers have been involved in a number of damaging and high-profile oil spills. As a result, they are subject to stringent design and operational regulations.


The commercial oil tanker AbQaiq
The commercial oil tanker AbQaiq, in ballast
Class overview
Name: Oil tanker
Subclasses: Handysize, Panamax, Aframax, Suezmax, Very Large Crude Carrier (VLCC), Ultra Large Crude Carrier (ULCC)
Built: c. 1863–present
In service: 4,024 (above 10,000 long tons deadweight (DWT)).
General characteristics
Class and type: Tank ship
Capacity: up to 550,000 DWT
Notes: Rear house, full hull, midships pipeline
Side view of an oil tanker.

AFRA Scale Flexible market scale
Class Size in DWT Class Size in DWT New
price
Used
price
General Purpose tanker 10,000–24,999 Product tanker 10,000–60,000 $43M $42.5M
Medium Range tanker 25,000–44,999 Panamax 60,000–80,000
LR1 (Large Range 1) 45,000–79,999 Aframax 80,000–120,000 $58M $60.7M
LR2 (Large Range 2) 80,000–159,999 Suezmax 120,000–200,000
VLCC (Very Large Crude Carrier) 160,000–319,999 VLCC 200,000–320,000 $120M $116M
ULCC (Ultra Large Crude Carrier) 320,000–549,999 Ultra Large Crude Carrier 320,000–550,000

Hellespont Alhambra (now TI Asia), a ULCC TI class supertanker, which are the largest ocean-going ships in the world










 


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia : Sea and coastal water transport (cargo, tanker and tugboat)
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