Polsteam

Polsteam
Public
Industry Shipping
Founded January 2, 1951 (1951-01-02)
Headquarters Szczecin, Poland
Area served
Global
Key people
Paweł Szynkaruk (CEO)
Website polsteam.com.pl

Polsteam, formerly known as the Polish Steamship Company (in Polish: Polska Żegluga Morska, PŻM), is a cargo ship operator based in Szczecin, Poland. Polsteam is a state-owned enterprise (SOE) with around 3,000 employees.

Company history

Polsteam was founded in 1951, nationalizing the assets of two Polish pre-WWII marine freight companies (Gdynia-Ameryka Linie Żeglugowe SA and Żegluga Polska), making it the oldest Polish cargo ship operator in existence.[1]

Initially, Polsteam's fleet comprised 11 ships of joint carrying capacity of approx 27,000 DWT.[2] Among those ships there were: four of the so-called. French ships, which were steamers built in 1926 in French shipyard of Chantiers Navals Francais in Blainville: SS Wieluń, SS Kraków, SS Toruń, SS Poznań, the oldest of the acquired ships was SS Narocz (2,520 DWT) built in 1915 in Great Britain, SS Narew (310 DWT) a small coaster built in 1944 in Germany and SS Elbląg (1,699 DWT) built in 1944. Four ships of B-30 series, constructed in 1949 in Gdańsk Shipyard: SS Sołdek (first ship in the post-WWII history of the Polish shipbuilding industry), SS Jedność Robotnicza, SS Pstrowski and SS Brygada Makowskiego (built in 1950).[2]

In early years of Polsteam's existence, the ship owner's vessels navigated on short and midrange sea routes (i.e. the Baltic Sea, North Sea and Mediterranean Sea). During the course of the first five years, they carried coal, wood, and iron ore. 80-90% of shipping involved tramping services and although the ship operator had three lines since 1951 namely: Szczecin - Stockholm, Szczecin - London - Rouen and Szczecin - Hamburg - Rotterdam - Antwerp.[2]

Fleet

It operates a fleet of 75 vessels (total: 2,500,000 DWT), mostly dry bulk carriers. Polsteam's particular specialty is the transportation of liquid sulfur.[3]

Polsteam also operates a passenger ferry service between Świnoujście and the Swedish ports of Ystad and Trelleborg via its subsidiary Unity Line.

The PZM line operates a bi-weekly service from the IJmuiden docks in Amsterdam to the North American port of Duluth, Minnesota.[4] Five 35,600-tonners were built in Japan by Mitsui over the years 1999-2000, and eight 30,000-tonners were built in China by Nanting Mingde over the years 2010-12. The older "Ziemia" class vessels were withdrawn from the Great Lakes trade before 2013.[4] The dimensions are limited by the locks of the Saint Lawrence Seaway and the 40ft draught of the Great Lakes Waterway. The Great Lakes Fleet comprise:[4]

Polsteam's Great Lakes Fleet[4]
image name year
built
deadweight
tonnage
length breadth
Irma 2000 35.600 200 metres (660 ft) 24 metres (79 ft)
Iryda 1999 35.600 200 metres (660 ft) 24 metres (79 ft)
Isa 1999 35.600 200 metres (660 ft) 24 metres (79 ft)
Isadora 1999 35.600 200 metres (660 ft) 24 metres (79 ft)
Isolda 1999 35.600 200 metres (660 ft) 24 metres (79 ft)
Drawsko 2010 30.000 190 metres (620 ft) 23 metres (75 ft)
Juno 2010 30.000 190 metres (620 ft) 23 metres (75 ft)
Lubie 2011 30.000 190 metres (620 ft) 23 metres (75 ft)
Mamry 2012 30.000 190 metres (620 ft) 23 metres (75 ft)
Miedwe 2010 30.000 190 metres (620 ft) 23 metres (75 ft)
Resko 2010 30.000 190 metres (620 ft) 23 metres (75 ft)
Solina 2011 30.000 190 metres (620 ft) 23 metres (75 ft)
Wicko 2010 30.000 190 metres (620 ft) 23 metres (75 ft)

Polsteam Ships

See also

References

  1. Firma z długą historią. „Bryza. Biuletyn informacyjny PŻM”, p. 1, 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 60 years of Polsteam - difficult beginnings. „Obserwator morski”, p. 17, 2010. ISSN 1899-5373
  3. http://www.polsteam.com.pl/flota Polsteam Fleet
  4. 1 2 3 4 cruisepeople.co.uk: "PZM Polish Steamship Company"
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