Exxon Valdez
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| 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 |
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.