The Northern Sea Route in 2018

Our usual excuse for an article such as this is an attempt by a “pleasure craft” such as the plucky little yacht Northabout to journey past Russia’s northern shores. I’m not aware of any such plans for this year, but here is some interesting NSR 2018 news. According to Reuters:

A Maersk vessel loaded with Russian fish and South Korean electronics will next week become the first container ship to navigate an Arctic sea route that Russia hopes will become a new shipping highway.

The Arctic voyage by the 3,600 20-foot container capacity Venta Maersk is the latest step in the expansion of the so-called Northern Sea Route which is becoming more accessible to ships as climate change reduces the amount of sea ice.

The brand new Venta Maersk, one of the world’s largest ice-class vessels, will also collect scientific data, said Maersk, underlining that the voyage is a one-off trial for now.

VentaMaersk-2018-08-24

The press release continues:

The decision by Maersk, the world’s biggest container shipping group, to test out the route is a positive sign for Russia, which hopes this could become a mini Suez Canal, cutting sea transport times from Asia to Europe.

“A well-respected company like Maersk sending a container ship through the Arctic, definitely signals there’s something there,” Malte Humpert, a senior fellow at U.S.-based think-tank Arctic Institute, said.

“Currently, we do not see the Northern Sea Route as an alternative to our usual routes. Today, the passage is only feasible for around three months a year which may change with time,” a spokeswoman for Maersk said.

Here’s the sea ice situation that the Venta Maersk is heading for:

Arc_20180824_res3.125_LARGE

According to AMSR2 there’s still some sea ice quite close to shore in the East Siberian Sea. Meanwhile according to Marine Traffic the Venta Maersk has already left Vladivostok:

Venta-2018-08-23_1833

It will be a little while before she’s braving the dangers of the sea ice in the East Siberian Sea. Hopefully by that time we’ll have some clear satellite images at visual frequencies of anything solid in the path of all those containers. In the meantime here’s a glimpse through the clouds of the approximate ice edge on August 23rd:

ESS-Aqua-721-2018-08-23

Meanwhile the Hapag Lloyd cruise ship Bremen is currently en route from Tromso to Nome via the Northern Sea Route. She is currently crossing the Laptev Sea heading for the ESS “choke point” from the opposite direction:

Bremen_2018_08_24_1100

8 thoughts on “The Northern Sea Route in 2018

  1. The Bremen is now in the East Siberian Sea, and spotted some sea ice in the distance at 00:50 (CEST by the look of it):

    Bremen_2018_08_27_0050

    By 04:50 she was in amongst it:

    Bremen_2018_08_27_0450

    Then by 12:50 she was out of the ice once again:

    Bremen_2018_08_27_1250

  2. By 01:30 CEST this morning the Bremen was in amongst some sea ice once again:

    Bremen_2018_08_28_0130

    A little while later she became enveloped in a seemingly never ending bank of mist.

  3. There seems to a problem of some sort with SailWX maps in the vicinity of the international date line. Nevertheless they show that Venta Maersk is passing Wrangel Island and will in amongst the remaining sea ice in the East Siberian Sea later today:

    VentaMaersk-2018-09-08_0600

    1. Yeah I had that problem yesterday, probably something to do with the way they represent their map. If you zoom out you’ll find that their world map terminates at 180ºW on the left and at 180ºE on the right. So when you cross the dateline you jump from the left edge of the map to the right!

      1. Venta Maersk is now passing north of Novaya Zemlya so has been making good progress. Should reach St Petersburg in good time.

Leave a Reply to Jim Hunt Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

The maximum upload file size: 8 MB. You can upload: image. Links to YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and other services inserted in the comment text will be automatically embedded. Drop files here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.