Azerbaijan Caspian Shipping Company

Azerbaijan Caspian Shipping Closed Joint-Stock Company (Azerbaijani: Azərbaycan Xəzər Dəniz Gəmiçiliyi) is an Azerbaijani shipping company. It is also known as CASPAR[2] (from the Russian Каспийское пароходство).

Azərbaycan Xəzər Dəniz Gəmiçiliyi
IndustryShipping, Rail Transport / Passenger
Founded1858[1]
HeadquartersBaku, Azerbaijan
Area served
Caspian Sea, Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea, Marmara Sea
Key people
Rauf Valiyev (Chairman)
Revenue$335.3m (2022)
Number of employees
7,003 (2020)
Parent(Parent Company AZCON Holding)
Websitewww.asco.az

The merchant fleet of the company consists of 98 vessels: 35 tankers, 15 ferries, 14 universal dry-cargo, 2 Ro-Ro and 35 different auxiliary ships. The offshore support fleet consists of 188 vessels, including 21 crane vessels, 22 supply and tug vessels, 29 passenger ships, 2 pipelay barges, 7 firefighting vessels, 5 geological survey vessels, 11 diving support vessels, and 84 other support vessels.

History

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Stamps of Azerbaijan, 2008-Azerbaijan

The history of the Caspian Shipping Company goes back to 21 May 1858, when “The Caucasus and Mercury” Joint-Stock Company was established in Baku.

On 6 June 1920 the Chairmen of the Council of People's Commissars of Azerbaijan SSR Nariman Narimanov signed a decree on nationalization of the Caspian merchant fleet. The public fleet consisted of 390 vessels of various tonnage, including 106 sailships. On 1 October 1923 the Public Joint-Stock Caspian Shipping Company was created.

By the decree of the President of the Azerbaijan Republic dated 22 October 2013 the country's two largest fleets - the Azerbaijan State Caspian Sea Shipping Company and the Caspian Sea Oil Fleet of the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic were merged, and the "Azerbaijan Caspian Shipping" Closed Joint-Stock Company was established.[2]

International Maritime Organization

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Since 1995 Azerbaijan has been a member of the International Maritime Organization,[3] which is responsible for enhancing the reliability and safety of navigation in international trade and for preventing marine pollution from ships.

Since January 2000 the Azerbaijan State Marine Academy has been included in the catalog of maritime training institutions of the International Maritime Organization under the number 012.[4]

 
"Zangilan" tanker July, 2 2024

Ferry fleet

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[19]

References

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  1. ^ Maher 2004, p. 655.
  2. ^ a b Frappi & Garibov 2014, p. 103.
  3. ^ "Member States". www.imo.org. Retrieved 2017-10-19.
  4. ^ "Azərbaycan Xəzər Dəniz Gəmiçiliyi/Структура". www.acsc.az. Archived from the original on 2017-06-14. Retrieved 2017-10-19.
  5. ^ "Asco.az".
  6. ^ "Asco.az".
  7. ^ "Asco.az".
  8. ^ "Asco.az".
  9. ^ "Asco.az".
  10. ^ "Asco.az".
  11. ^ "Asco.az".
  12. ^ "Asco.az".
  13. ^ "Asco.az".
  14. ^ "Asco.az".
  15. ^ "Asco.az".
  16. ^ "Asco.az".
  17. ^ "Asco.az".
  18. ^ "Asco.az".
  19. ^ "Asco.az".

Sources

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  • Frappi, Carlo; Garibov, Azad, eds. (2014). The Caspian Sea Chessboard: Geo-Political, Geo-Strategic And Geo-Economic Analysis. EGEA.
  • Maher, Joanne, ed. (2004). Europa World Year. Vol. I. Taylor & Francis Group.655