Mangaluru: The Indian Coast Guard Ship Vikram, which was commissioned by Union Minister of Defence for State Dr Subash Bhamre on April 11 at Chennai arrived in Mangaluru on Sunday, May 13.
It was the first in class of seven new generation offshore patrol vessels contracted by the Ministry of Defence to Larsen and Toubro Ltd. in March 2015 under the government’s Make in India initiative. The ship's keel was laid in March 2016 and the construction including trials and commissioning was completed in 25 months.
The indigenously built ship with advanced navigation and communication facilities anchored alongside Berth No 1 at New Mangalore Port at 9.40 a.m. It was welcomed with the national anthem and “Sarae Jahan Se Acha”. It has a complement of 14 officers and 88 men.
The ship is 98 metres long, 15 metres wide, has a 3.6 metres draught. It has 2,140 tons displacement, a range of 5,000 Nautical Miles and can attain a sustained speed of 26 knots. It is built with Integrated Platform Management System to enable special control capabilities.
With this, the fleet of patrol vessels of the Coast Guard in the Karnataka headquarters in Mangaluru rose to five. The Coast Guard has four fast patrol vessels based here.
“The ship is designed to carry one twin-engine light helicopter and another twin-engine heavy helicopter with night flying capabilities,” Commandant Satwant Singh, in-charge Commander, Coast Guard, Karnataka, said at the welcoming ceremony.
It carries four high speed boats, including two rigid hull inflatable boats for swift boarding operation, search and rescue, law enforcement and maritime patrol. The ship is capable of carrying limited pollution response equipment to contain oil spill at sea, he said.
“It is a major milestone in augmenting maritime security on the Karnataka coast,” Mr. Singh said.









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