General information

IMO:
9401312
MMSI:
219031008
Callsign:
OZMX2
Width:
17.0 m
Length:
106.0 m
Deadweight:
Gross tonnage:
TEU:
Liquid Capacity:
Year of build:
Class:
AIS type:
Tankship
Ship type:
Flag:
Denmark
Builder:
Owner:
Operator:
Insurer:

Course/Position

Position:
Navigational status:
Moored
Course:
140.5° / 0.0
Heading:
119.0° / 0.0
Speed:
Max speed:
Status:
moored
Location:
Ceuta (Ceuta Port)
Area:
Spain
Last seen:
2025-07-28
5 min ago
Source:
T-AIS
Destination:
ETA:
Summer draft:
Current draft:
Last update:
1 min ago
Source:
T-AIS

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Latest ports

Port
Arrival
Departure
Duration
2025-07-28
1h 59m
2025-07-20
2025-07-21
1d 20h 30m
2025-07-17
2025-07-18
1d 10m
2025-07-16
2025-07-16
2h 11m
2025-07-15
2025-07-16
5h 37m
2025-07-14
2025-07-15
1d 3h 6m
2025-07-11
2025-07-12
1d 37m
2025-07-09
2025-07-10
1d 30m
2025-07-06
2025-07-07
1d 11h 48m
2025-07-05
2025-07-05
42m
Note: All times are in UTC

Latest Waypoints

Waypoints
Time
Direction
Strait of Gibraltar
2025-07-28
Leave
Dover
2025-07-23
Enter
Calais
2025-07-23
Enter
Weser Pilot Tonne 2
2025-07-18
Enter
Wangerooge
2025-07-18
Leave
Mellum West
2025-07-18
Leave
Note: All times are in UTC

Latest news

A Danish court found that the master of the 'Samus Swan' acted with negligence in an anchor-dragging incident

Sat Jul 05 18:52:56 CEST 2025 Timsen

A Danish court has found that although the master of the 'Samus Swan' acted with negligence in an anchor-dragging incident that severed a subsea power cable, the shipping company’s liability is limited. The case, which dates to Feb 26, 2022, comes as the issue of anchor dragging and intent and awareness of the situation has been raised after similar incidents in the Baltic that are under legal review. The island of Bornholm was plunged into darkness with the Swedish energy company Energinet quickly determining that one of its undersea power cables had been severely damaged. Power was restored within a few hours with a reserve generation station on the island while it would take over a month to repair the cable. The 'Samus Swan' was quickly identified as the likely cause of the power failure. Tracking showed the vessel had been in the channel offshore but initially denied responsibility. The Danish shipping company Uni-Tankers, which operates the vessel, later admitted responsibility but said it was an accident due in part to heavy weather. Energinet sued in 2023 reporting that it had cost the company nearly $8 million to repair the cable. The process took until March 2022, with the company reporting more than 2.5 miles of cable had to be replaced. The judges on Denmark’s Maritime and Commercial Court issued a ruling on July 4, 2025, finding that while they agreed the captain showed negligence, they did not believe it rose to the level of gross negligence because there was no knowledge of the likelihood of damage to the cable. The crew did not recognize that the anchor had dropped. When the vessel started to lose speed, the captain focused on the engines. Two of the experts on the panel believed the captain’s behaviour was negligent, while a third said it was gross negligence. The court’s decision permits Uni-Tanker to limit the level of liability to a maximum of approximately $4.3 million (DKK 27.2 million). Energinet had been suing for approximately $6 million (DKK 38 million) and was saddened by the decision, reviewing the verdict and by law, and has the right to appeal to the High Court.

Shipping company Uni-Tankers sued for a compensation of DKK 38 million

Mon Jul 31 10:09:20 CEST 2023 Timsen

The Funen based shipping company Uni-Tankers was sued for a compensation of DKK 38 million by the Maritime and Commercial Court for destroying the submarine cable over to Bornhol with the 'Samus Swan' on Feb 26, 2022, which meant that the power to the island was interrupted. The 'Samus Swan' was on its way from Latvia to Rotterdam, when it probably pulled an anchor through the cable, so the electricity supply from the mainland was cut. However, a decommissioned power plant on Bornholm was put into operation in just six hours.

Tanker suspected to have cut undersea cable off Bornholm

Thu Mar 10 11:11:39 CET 2022 Timsen

The 'Samus Swan', sailing for the Danish shipping company Uni-Tankers, was suspected to have switched off all lights on Bornholm early in the morning of Feb 26, 2022, en route from Ventspils to Rotterdam. It was found out that the vessel was in the area at that time by comparing data on the ship's movements based on AIS signals, with the cabling across the seabed and the time of the power outage. The information pointed in the direction that it was the Danish-powered tanker which tore the power cable to pieces, so that the power went out on Bornholm. The investigations were going on.

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Distance travelled

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Ship master data