ARA Almirante Irízar (Q-5)
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History | |
---|---|
Argentina | |
Name: | Almirante Irízar |
Owner: | Argentine Navy |
Ordered: | 1975 |
Builder: | Wärtsilä Helsinki Shipyard, Finland |
Launched: | 1978 |
Acquired: | 1975 |
Identification: | IMO number: 7533628 |
Status: | Undergoing repairs at Tandanor shipyard, Buenos Aires |
General characteristics (as built) | |
Displacement: | 14,899 tons[1] |
Length: | 121.3 m (398 ft) |
Beam: | 25.2 m (83 ft) |
Draft: | 9.5 m (31 ft) |
Installed power: | 4 × Wärtsilä-Pielstick 8PC2-5L (4 × 3,828 kW) |
Propulsion: |
|
Speed: |
|
Endurance: | 60 days |
Complement: | 245[3] |
Aircraft carried: |
|
Aviation facilities: | Hangar and helipad |
General characteristics (after refit) | |
Installed power: | 2 × MAN diesel engines |
Complement: | 313[3] |
The ARA Almirante Irízar is a large icebreaker of the Argentine Navy. She was built in Finland in 1975.[1]
The ship has been out of service since 2007, when a fire broke out in the auxiliary generator compartment. As of November 2012[update], the repairs should be completed by the end of 2013 at a cost of over US$100m.
Contents
Background
The ship was named after Julián Irízar. In 1903, when he held the rank of Lieutenant, he commanded the Argentine corvette ARA Uruguay during a successful mission to rescue the Swedish Antarctic Expedition of Professor Otto Nordenskjöld, after the expedition had been trapped by the Antarctic winter.[4]
The vessel was built at the Wärtsilä Helsinki Shipyard in Finland, under a contract signed in 1975 between the Argentine Navy and the shipyard. Irízar was launched in February 1978 and was formally commissioned on December that year, arriving in Argentina on 1979-3-23. She replaced the elderly icebreaker ARA General San Martín, which was then retired from active service.
Almirante Irízar's peacetime missions include annual campaigns to resupply and rotate the personnel assigned to the Argentine Antarctic outposts, as well as conducting and supporting scientific endeavors in Antarctica. She has also conducted several passenger tours to Patagonia and the Antarctic.
The ship's homeport is at the Argentine Navy's Buenos Aires Naval Anchorage (Spanish: Apostadero Naval Buenos Aires) in the capital city of Buenos Aires.
Service
During the Falklands War (Spanish: Guerra de Malvinas) the vessel served as a troop transport and then as a hospital ship,[4] a role for which her crew included medical personnel from the Argentine Army in addition to the naval medical staff.[citation needed] After the end of the war, she was used to return Argentine injured personnel back to the continent.[4]
The ship gained attention in 2002, when she attempted to rescue the trapped supply vessel Magdalena Oldendorff.[5][6][7][8] Even though Irízar failed to break the Magdalena Oldendorff free, she managed to move it to a safety position and resupply the ship with food, medicine and medical personnel until the ice melted and Magdalena Oldendorff could return to open sea.[9][10]
2004 Incident
On 15/16 March 2004, the ship entered a maritime area designated as conservation zones under the jurisdiction of the Falkland Islands and issued demands for other ships to identify themselves.[11] This prompted a protest from the British government to the Argentine government over its policing of seas under Falkland jurisdiction. The diplomatic note also re-asserted British sovereignty over the islands.[12]
2007 Fire
On 2007-4-10 at 22:00 UTC−03:00,[1] a fire broke out in the auxiliary generator compartment.[13] By midnight,[1] the captain Guillermo Tarapow had ordered the evacuation.[13] Argentine Navy and Argentine Coast Guard aircraft, including P-3 Orion and Hercules C-130 aircraft,[1] operated to keep track of the 24 lifeboats.[13] The 296 persons aboard the icebreaker —including civilians of the Antarctic bases— were helped by the nearest ships, the Panamanian tanker Scarlet Ibis and a Uruguayan fishing vessel. The icebreaker was returning from its annual Antarctic summer campaign, and the incident took place some 140 miles (230 km) east of Puerto Madryn.[13]
The crew arrived safely in Puerto Madryn on 12 Apr There were no casualties.[14]
The vessel's captain remained aboard alone for almost 24 hours after seeing his crew safely evacuated from the ship. Starting 11 April,[citation needed] destroyer ARA Almirante Brown,[15][16] corvettes ARA Granville,[16] and ARA Robinson,[15][16] avisos ARA Gurruchaga,[citation needed] ARA Suboficial Castillo,[15][16] and ARA Teniente Oliveri,[15][16] and Coast Guard PNA Thompson,[citation needed] surrounded the Icebreaker and began rescue operations. Buzos Tacticos and members of the Rescue Team (Spanish: Servicio de Salvamento) of the Argentine Navy boarded the ship and extinguished the fire. On 18 April, the ship started being towed to the Puerto Belgrano naval base.[17] Irizar finally arrived to Puerto Belgrano on 20 April.[18]
The fire caused the loss of the two Sea King helicopters stored in their hangar, worth US$18 million each.[19] These have been replaced by four Sea Kings transferred from the US government.
Following this incident the British government offered to supply Argentine bases in Antarctica in support of scientific missions, using HMS Endurance.[20] This offer was turned down by the Argentine government,[21] instead they leased the Russian icebreaker Vasily Golovnin for the subsequent Antarctic summer campaigns[22][23] at a cost of US$2m/month.[24] Dutch vessel Timca was hired for the 2012/3 campaign.[25][26] The Russian ship Vasily Golovnin will again carry out the following Antarctic campaign.[27]
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After a long period in Puerto Belgrano due to legal issues surrounding the incident, the Irizar finally arrived in Buenos Aires on 2008-9-3 to be taken to Tandanor's shipyard for repairs. Repairs were expected to be completed in 2010 but they have continued into 2011, and are supervised by Norwegian shipyard Aker Yards.[28][29] As of November 2012[update], the refit had costed over US$100 million and the ship was not expected to be ready until late 2013.[24] In April 2013 , it was disclosed that the ship was still awaiting the necessary repairs and that sea trials had been delayed by a year, with oppositors claiming the money spent —some US$200 million plus another US$75 million in contracting supplying vessels[25]— could have been used to buy a new ship;[30] a month later, it was announced that work regarding control panels was still pending.[25]
The Tandanor shipyard is not just repairing the fire damage but also reconfiguring the vessel to increase laboratory space from 74 m2 (800 sq ft) up to 415 square metres (4,470 sq ft). This will allow it to be used primarily as a research vessel in addition to its role of resupplying the southernmost Antarctic base Belgrano II.[3] The diesel engines will be replaced by two new ones purchased from MAN, in October 2011.[3][31][32] The main radar of the Irizar is also being repaired in Argentina by CITEDEF [33] Work is estimated to be finished by November 2011.[34]
Further reading
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References
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- ↑ La Armada Argentina solicitó una cotización para la reparación del radar del Irízar y ésta fue de 5.5 millones de dólares, mientras que el CITEDEF lo reparará por 1.3 millones de dólares
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External links
- Articles with dead external links from October 2010
- IMO Number
- Articles containing potentially dated statements from November 2012
- Articles containing Spanish-language text
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with unsourced statements from August 2013
- Articles with unsourced statements from May 2011
- Use dmy dates from June 2014
- Argentina articles missing geocoordinate data
- Icebreakers of the Argentine Navy
- Maritime incidents in 2004
- Maritime incidents in 2007
- Maritime incidents in Argentina
- Ship fires
- Ships built in Finland
- Falklands War naval ships of Argentina
- Research vessels of Argentina
- 1978 ships
- Hospital ships during the Falklands War