Icebreakers of Russia
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There is a disagreement as to whether the Russia first "true" icebreaker was Pilot (manufactured in Great Britain in 1862, whose ice-breaking capabilities were enhanced in Russia in 1864) or genuinely first 1898 Arctic ice-faring icebreaker Yermak.[1]

In Russia, icebreakers are classified in several ways, according to different criteria:[2][3]
- By purpose
- Leader icebreakers: The most powerful icebreakers that head ship caravans
- Line icebreakers: For guiding and towing of ships on sea routes, for freeing ice-stuck ships
- Auxiliary icebreakers: for work in ports, river mouths, and for emergency rescue operations
- By ice passability:
- heavy icebreakers can break through ice up to 2 m thick
- medium icebreakers, for ice from 1 to 1.5 m thick
- light icebreakers, for ice less than 1 m thick
- By power type:
- Steam engine; obsolete, unused
- Diesel-electric engine; the most common type
- Nuclear-powered icebreakers
- By operating method
- Ice-cutting. These ships existed in 19th-20th centuries, and for them the term "icecutter" was used in Russia[4]
- Ice-breaking
- By operational area
- River icebreakers
- Marine icebreakers
- Port icebreakers
The official classification of a particular vessel may be found in the database of the Russian Maritime Register of Shipping.[3]
The following lists include icebreakers owned and/or operated by either governmental or commercial entities. Ships known to be currently in service are presented in bold.[5][6]
Nuclear-powered icebreakers

The following ships are nuclear-powered icebreakers;
- Lenin (1959–1989; museum ship in Murmansk)
- Arktika class
- Taymyr class
- Project 22220
- Project 10510
Diesel-powered icebreakers
The following ships are/were fitted with diesel engines for powering their propulsion;
- Wind class
- Severny Veter (1944–1951; ex-USCGC Staten Island; returned to the United States)
- Severniy Polyus (1945–1951; ex-USS Westwind; returned to the United States)
- Admiral Makarov (1945–1949; ex-USCGC Southwind; returned to the United States)
- Kapitan Belousov class
- Kapitan Belousov (1954–1991; sold to Ukraine)[19]
- Kapitan Voronin (1955–1996; broken up)[20]
- Kapitan Melekhov (1956–1994; broken up)[21]
- Moskva class
- Civilian variants of Dobrynya Nikitich class (Project 97A)
- Vasiliy Pronchishchev (1961–1989; ex-Ledokol-1; broken up)[27]
- Afanasy Nikitin (1962–1992; ex-Ledokol-2; passed over to Ukraine)[28]
- Khariton Laptev (1962–1996; ex-Ledokol-3; broken up)[29]
- Vasiliy Poyarkov (1963–1988; ex-Ledokol-4; broken up)[30]
- Yerofey Khabarov (1963–1993; ex-Ledokol-5; broken up)[31]
- Ivan Kruzenstern (1964–; ex-Ledokol-6)[32]
- Vladimir Rusanov (1964–1988; ex-Ledokol-7; broken up)[33]
- Semyon Chelyuskin (1965–1988; ex-Ledokol-8; broken up)[34]
- Yuriy Lisyanskiy (1965–2021; ex-Ledokol-9; to be broken up)[35]
- Fyodor Litke (1970–2013; broken up)[36]
- Ivan Moskvitin (1971–1997; broken up)[37]
- Semyon Dezhnev (1971–)[38]
- Ermak class
- Ermak (1974–2021; broken up)[39]
- Admiral Makarov (1975–)
- Krasin (1976–)
- Kapitan M. Izmaylov class
- Kapitan M. Izmaylov (1976–)
- Kapitan Kosolapov (1976–)
- Kapitan A. Radzhabov (1976–1992; transferred to Azerbaijan)
- Kapitan Sorokin class
- Kapitan Sorokin (1977–; fitted with Thyssen-Waas bow in 1991)
- Kapitan Nikolaev (1978–; rebuilt in 1990)
- Kapitan Dranitsyn (1980–)
- Kapitan Khlebnikov (1981–)
- Kapitan Chechkin class
- Kapitan Chechkin (1977–)
- Kapitan Plakhin (1977–)
- Kapitan Chadaev (1978–)
- Kapitan Krutov (1978–)
- Kapitan Bukaev (1978–)
- Kapitan Zarubin (1978–)
- Mudyug class
- Kapitan Evdokimov class
- Kapitan Evdokimov (1983–)
- Kapitan Babichev (1983–)
- Kapitan Chudinov (1983–)
- Kapitan Borodkin (1983–)
- Avraamiy Zavenyagin (1984–)
- Kapitan Mecaik (1984–)
- Kapitan Deminov (1984–)
- Kapitan Moshkin (1986–)
- Tor (2000–; purchased from Sweden)[40]
- Karu (2002–2020; ex-Karhu, ex-Kapitan Chubakov; purchased from Estonia; broken up)
- Dudinka (2006–; ex-Apu; purchased from Finland)
- Project 21900
- Moskva (2008–)
- Sankt-Peterburg (2009–)
- Project 21900M
- Vladivostok (2015–)
- Murmansk (2015–)[41]
- Novorossiysk (2016–)[42]
- Ob (2019–)[43]
- Georgiy Sedov (2019–; ex-Antarcticaborg; purchased from Kazakhstan)
- Viktor Chernomyrdin (2020–)[44]
- Project 21900M2
- Project 23620
- Project 22740M
