YANTAR
IMO 7524419
Updated: 10.03.2026
Vessel name
YANTAR
Category
Other
IMO
7524419
Flag (Current)
MMSI
Call sign
Vessel Type
Research Vessel
Length (m)
Gross tonnage
DWT
P&I Club
Sanctions
Sanctions lifted
The person in connection with whom
sanctions have been applied
sanctions have been applied
Provide additional information
Justification
Vessel information
The russian oceanographic research vessel, the lead ship of Project 22010 "Kryus," is nominally designed to study the thickness of the World Ocean and its bottom, belongs to and is operated by JSC Yuzhmorgeologiya, one of the leading scientific and production divisions of JSC Rosgeologia, which has more than 65 years of practical experience in conducting marine and land geological exploration work.
The vessel was built at the Baltic Shipyard (Kaliningrad) by order of the Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research, a secret division of the russian Ministry of Defense.
In fact, the vessel is operated under the supervision of the Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research of the russian Ministry of Defense.
The Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research (military unit No. 45707) plans and carries out special secret missions, including:
- deep-sea research of the seabed,
- reconnaissance of underwater global infrastructure,
- installation of various equipment on the seabed,
- collection and recovery of debris, equipment from sunken sea and air vessels, satellites to obtain information about the level of technological development of potential adversaries,
- study of human physiology in extreme underwater conditions,
- conducting rescue operations.
It is considered that the Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research plans and controls deep sea sabotage and reconnaissance missions in the interests of the russian federation.
The hydrographers of this military unit are engaged not only in reconnaissance activities, but also in planning and preliminary preparation of large-scale sabotage operations on transatlantic fiber-optic communication lines between Europe and North America.
The ship can carry helicopters on board and is equipped with special underwater vehicles that can dive to a depth of about 6,000 meters. It is equipped with information gathering equipment and can carry manned and unmanned deep-sea submarines. The ship is likely capable of intercepting military communications and internet cables and installing explosives that can be detonated in the future.
The ship can be used for reconnaissance and sabotage against the underwater infrastructure of NATO and EU member states, especially in the Baltic, Barents, and North Seas.
The vessel is believed to be part of a flotilla of russian vessels that participated in a 13-month campaign to monitor the underwater infrastructure of NATO and EU member states, which began in the fall of 2023, particularly in the Irish Sea between the UK and Ireland, and along submarine cables between mainland Norway and the Svalbard archipelago, among other locations.
Vessels and ships associated with the Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research are based in Gadzhiyevo, a strategically important location in the Kola Bay of the Barents Sea.
Today, russia maintains a fleet of research vessels that serve civilian, research, and military purposes and are considered a key element of russian naval strategy, especially in the field of deep-sea exploration and sabotage. The russian fleet retains significant experience and specialized capabilities for underwater operations, supported by a special department for deep-sea sabotage and reconnaissance.
The vessel was built at the Baltic Shipyard (Kaliningrad) by order of the Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research, a secret division of the russian Ministry of Defense.
In fact, the vessel is operated under the supervision of the Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research of the russian Ministry of Defense.
The Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research (military unit No. 45707) plans and carries out special secret missions, including:
- deep-sea research of the seabed,
- reconnaissance of underwater global infrastructure,
- installation of various equipment on the seabed,
- collection and recovery of debris, equipment from sunken sea and air vessels, satellites to obtain information about the level of technological development of potential adversaries,
- study of human physiology in extreme underwater conditions,
- conducting rescue operations.
It is considered that the Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research plans and controls deep sea sabotage and reconnaissance missions in the interests of the russian federation.
The hydrographers of this military unit are engaged not only in reconnaissance activities, but also in planning and preliminary preparation of large-scale sabotage operations on transatlantic fiber-optic communication lines between Europe and North America.
The ship can carry helicopters on board and is equipped with special underwater vehicles that can dive to a depth of about 6,000 meters. It is equipped with information gathering equipment and can carry manned and unmanned deep-sea submarines. The ship is likely capable of intercepting military communications and internet cables and installing explosives that can be detonated in the future.
The ship can be used for reconnaissance and sabotage against the underwater infrastructure of NATO and EU member states, especially in the Baltic, Barents, and North Seas.
The vessel is believed to be part of a flotilla of russian vessels that participated in a 13-month campaign to monitor the underwater infrastructure of NATO and EU member states, which began in the fall of 2023, particularly in the Irish Sea between the UK and Ireland, and along submarine cables between mainland Norway and the Svalbard archipelago, among other locations.
Vessels and ships associated with the Main Directorate for Deep Sea Research are based in Gadzhiyevo, a strategically important location in the Kola Bay of the Barents Sea.
Today, russia maintains a fleet of research vessels that serve civilian, research, and military purposes and are considered a key element of russian naval strategy, especially in the field of deep-sea exploration and sabotage. The russian fleet retains significant experience and specialized capabilities for underwater operations, supported by a special department for deep-sea sabotage and reconnaissance.
Cases of AIS shutdown
Yes
Calling at russian ports
Yes
Visited ports
Alger (Algeria), Murmansk (russia)
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Available additional information
Ship Owner (IMO / Country / Date)
Yuzhmorgeologiya JSC (1321780 / russian federation / 1999)
Commercial ship manager (IMO / Country / Date)
Yuzhmorgeologiya JSC (1321780 / russian federation / 1999)
Ship Safety Management Manager (IMO / Country / Date)
Unknown (01.11.1997)
Former ship names
Flags (former)
Build year
1975
Builder (country)
JSC "Baltic Shipyard "Yantar"
Web Resources