Sparred Length: 98,00 m; (Length of hull): 84,60 m; (Length of waterline): 73,00 m
Beam
12,60 m
Height
Max. Height: 48,00 m
Draft
5.20 m
Propulsion
22 Sails
Sail plan
Sail area: 2026 m2
Speed
11 knots (engine) / 17 knots (sails)
Complement
17 (permanent crew)
150
Statsraad Lehmkuhl is a three-masted barque rigged sail training vessel owned and operated by the Statsraad Lehmkuhl Foundation. It is based in Bergen, Norway and contracted out for various purposes, including serving as a school ship for the Royal Norwegian Navy (using RNoN's prefix "HNoMS").
In 2000, she was chartered by the German Navy while their Gorch Fock was overhauled.
In 2019 the ship was upgraded from diesel to hybrid power by Kongsberg, whereby a 370 kWh battery bank is charged while the ship is being powered by the wind, and can be used to drive the ship's propellers when the sails no longer provide sufficient power, only relying on the ship's KRM6 diesel engine from Bergen Engines as backup support. The batteries are also used to provide energy for the ship's instruments, lights and galley.[2][3][4]
In 2021, the ship featured in an NRKslow TV feature from 6 July to 15 August, sailing from Nordkapp Municipality to Arendal Municipality calling at ports along the Norwegian coastline.[5] In August 2021 Statsraad Lehmkuhl started the "One Ocean Expedition", circumnavigating the world equipped as a scientific research vessel, collecting meteorological and hydrographical data along with samples of fish, microplastics, zooplankton, eDNA, and carbon dioxide in the water. The ship was hired by marine research institutions on some of the legs.
In spring of 2022 the Ocean Frontier Institute sponsored undergraduate students from Dalhousie University in Halifax and Memorial University of Newfoundland on a 16-week expedition aboard the ship.[6] The students participated as crew members following an ocean sustainability course offered through Norway's University of Bergen.
The ship has participated numerous times in the Tall Ship Races persistently finishing high in standing in her class.
Sister ships
The three sister ships of Statsraad Lehmkuhl also survive: