MOSCOW (Sputnik) – Previous reports placed the launch date for the vessel billed as the world’s largest and most powerful vessel of its kind at May 26, to coincide with the 160-year anniversary of the Baltic Shipyard.
"The launch is somewhat postponed, for a time determined in weeks, but not more than a month," Rosatomflot Director General Vyacheslav Ruksha told RIA Novosti, noting that the moved schedule was "absolutely uncritical."
Ruksha lauded the shipyard, part of the United Shipbuilding Corporation, for continuing work despite the financial difficulties.
"I am confident that we will complete the assembly of the icebreaker’s large equipment before the end of this year. The icebreaker will be completely ‘assembled’ before the summer of 2017, then nuclear fuel loading will start. In any case, we aim to enter the mooring trials by the end of 2017, as stated in the contract," Ruksha said.
In 2014, the Baltic Shipyard signed a contract worth 84.4 billion rubles ($1.2 billion under the current exchange rate) with Russia’s state-run atomic energy agency Rosatom to build two Project 22220 icebreakers by 2020. The ships will be commissioned in December 2019 and December 2020 respectively.
In a separate deal, the Russian atomic agency paid 37 billion rubles (roughly $1.1 billion in 2012) for Project 22220’s maiden ship, named the Arktika. It was laid down in November 2013 and is due to be launched in December 2017.