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Exxon Valdez

Summary: Career Ordered:? Laid down:? Launched:? Delivered:11 December 1986 Fate:"mothballed" in undisclosed Mediterranean port Laid Up:September 2002 General Characteristics Displacement:211,469 tons Length:300 m (987 ft) Beam:50 m (166 ft) Draft:20 m (64.5 ft) Speed:16.25 knots (30 km/h) Comp ...

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Exxon Valdez

     From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Career
Ordered:?
Laid down:?
Launched:?
Delivered:11 December 1986
Fate:"mothballed" in undisclosed Mediterranean port
Laid Up:September 2002
General Characteristics
Displacement:211,469 tons
Length:300 m (987 ft)
Beam:50 m (166 ft)
Draft:20 m (64.5 ft)
Speed:16.25 knots (30 km/h)
Complement:21 crew
Cargo Capacity:1.48 million barrels (235,000 m³) of crude oil
Exxon Valdez was the original name of an oil tanker owned by the Exxon oil company. The ship was renamed to SeaRiver Mediterranean after the March 24, 1989 oil spill in which the tanker hit Prince William Sound's Bligh Reef and spilled 11 million gallons; this was the Exxon Valdez oil spill.

The vessel has an all steel construction, built by National Steel and Shipbuilding Company in San Diego. It was delivered to Exxon in December, 1986. The tanker is 300 m (987 ft) long, 50 m (166 ft) wide and 27 m (88 ft) in depth, weighing 30,000 tons empty and powered by a 31,650 shp (24 MW) diesel engine. The vessel could transport a maximum of 1.48 million barrels (200,000 t) at a sustained speed of 16.25 knots (30 km/h) and was employed to transport crude oil from the Alyeska consortium's pipeline terminal in Valdez, Alaska to the lower 48 states of the United States.

It makes a cameo appearance in the film Waterworld.

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