JSC "BALTIC PLANT"
Since its foundation in 1856, the Baltic Shipyard has been one of the leading shipbuilding enterprises in Russia. Since 2011, the plant has been a 100% subsidiary of the state-owned United Shipbuilding Corporation. The plant has production facilities and modern equipment for the construction of full-cycle vessels and ships, as well as two slipways and an indoor boathouse. In total, over the 160-year history of the enterprise, more than 600 technically complex and unique warships, submarines and civilian vessels were built here.
Areas of activity
Today, nuclear surface civil shipbuilding has become one of the most important areas of activity. The Baltic Shipyard has unique competencies and all necessary licenses for the construction of surface vessels with nuclear power plants. It was here that all operating Russian nuclear icebreakers equipped with KLT-40 ship reactors and its modifications, as well as nuclear cruisers, were built.
Machine-building complex
The Baltic Shipyard produces a wide range of marine energy and mechanical engineering products, both for equipping ships and vessels of its own construction, and for supplies to other shipbuilding enterprises. The plant's engineering nomenclature includes heat exchange equipment for nuclear power plants, launchers, equipment for marine engineering: fixed and adjustable pitch propellers with a full manufacturing cycle, shafts for ships and vessels of all classes, deadwood and steering devices, thrust shafts and much more. The plant is also equipped with a full-fledged production of non-ferrous, steel and cast iron casting.
Shipbuilding complex
The universal nuclear icebreakers "Arctic", "Siberia" and "Ural" of project 22220 are being built at the production sites of the Baltic Plant, which will become the largest and most powerful icebreakers in the world. The vessels are built by order from FSUE Rosatomflot for the class of the Russian Maritime Register of Shipping (RS). In 2019, a contract was signed for the construction of two more LK-60 nuclear-powered ships. At the end of June 2019, the specialists of the Baltic Plant completed work on the creation of the world's only floating power unit (PEB) Akademik Lomonosov and handed over the vessel to the customer. In 2020, the PEB was commissioned as part of the world's first floating nuclear thermal power plant (NPP) in Pevek (Chukotka Autonomous District).