HDMS Hvidbjørnen (F360) sailing off Nuuk, Greenland
History
Kingdom of Denmark
NameHvidbjørnen
Laid down2 January 1991
Launched11 October 1991
In service30 November 1992
Identification
Badge
General characteristics
Class and typeThetis-class ocean patrol vessel
Armament1 x 76-mm 62-cal. OTO Melara Super Rapid DP

7 x 12.7 mm heavy machine guns 4 x 7.62 mm light machine guns

1 x depth charge rack and MU90 Advanced Lightweight Torpedo for anti-submarine warfare

HDMS Hvidbjørnen (Hvidbjørnen is older Danish for polar bear) is a Thetis-class patrol vessel belonging to the Royal Danish Navy.

Service

Hvidbjørnen. dockside at Danish Naval base at Kangilinnguit (formerly Grønnedal), Greenland

Hvidbjørnen served as a platform for Commander Danish Task Group from 1998 to 2002, whereafter her sister ship Thetis assumed the role.

During a patrol in the waters of the Faroe Islands, the French trawler Bruix was suspected of illegal fishing. When approached by Hvidbjørnen the French trawler refused to let an inspection team aboard and started to sail towards the territorial border. During the chase the two ships collided (no persons injured).[1][2][3]

Hvidbjørnen and Ejnar Mikkelsen participated with Danish air elements in sovereignty and Search and Rescue exercises off Greenland's west coast in 2009.[4] The vessels' patrol took them to the Nares Strait, close to Hans Island, the approaches to the Northwest Passage, and to Lancaster Sound. In Lancaster Sound they joined in a Search and Rescue exercise with the Canadian Coast Guard vessel, CCGS Henry Larsen.

References

  1. Beviserne er i hus mod den franske fisker in Danish
  2. Flugttrawler fik beslaglagt last in Danish
  3. Hvidbjørnen getting repairs in Lerwick Harbour, Shetland
  4. "Update: Denmark's Arctic Assets and Canada's Response — Northern Deployment 2009: Danish Navy & CCG in the High Arctic". Canadian American Strategic Review. September 2009. Archived from the original on 2009-10-07.



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