GASCHEM BREMEN

Tanker

Information related to the Tanker vessel GASCHEM BREMEN (MMSI 218859000, IMO 9471032) from Germany with latest positions and portcalls.

MMSI 218859000
IMO 9471032
Name GASCHEM BREMEN
Country  Germany
MMSI Type Vessel
Type Tanker
Sub Type No additional information
Call Sign DGLB2
Class A
Course 280.6
Heading (°) 281.0
Status Moored
Next update

First Seen 7 years ago
Last Update 5 years ago
Positions 19
Latitude 49.475727
Longitude 0.203243
Length (m) 165.0
Width (m) 28.0
ETA Jan 22, 2020 12:00 AM

Distance travelled (nm)

Since first seen 105253.05
Since last port call 0.22
Since last position 0

Estimated Load

16%

Speed (kn) / Draught (m)


Draught (m)

Current 6.7
Min 6
Max 10.3
Average 8.16

About this vessel

The Tanker vessel GASCHEM BREMEN (MMSI 218859000, IMO 9471032, call sign DGLB2) is registered under the flag of Germany (DE). It was last located at latitude 49.475727 N and longitude 0.203243 E as of Mar 12, 2020 10:34 AM (5 years ago). The vessel is currently moored, heading 281° at a speed of 0.0 knots. It is drawing 6.7 meters and estimated to be loaded at 16%. The vessel has an overall length of 165 meters and a beam of 28 meters. The last recorded port call was at s-Gravenzande, Netherlands, on Mar 19, 2019 10:39 PM (6 years ago) and has traveled 423 nautical miles since the last port call. The ETA for the next destination is Jan 22, 2020 12:00 AM. The vessel has travelled for 105253.05 nm since its appearance in Oceanook 7 years ago and it has changed its name 2 times.

Timeline

The following timeline will display the list of porcalls and other events regarding the ship including tracks.

  • {{'timeend' in e ? e.timeend + ' - ' : ''}} {{e.time}}

    Navigation ({{e.object.length}} positions)

    Sunken

    This vessel has sunken

     Safety Message: {{e.object.message}}

     Arrival to {{e.object.port.name}}

     Departure from {{e.object.port.name}}

    Name changed

    This vessel has changed its name to {{e.object}}

    First seen

    This vessel has been detected for the first time by Oceanook