Marina Starovoitova Is World’s First Female Captain of Nuclear Icebreaker

Marina Starovoitova Is World’s First Female Captain of Nuclear Icebreaker

She was awarded a Captain’s badge at the nuclear industry anniversary concert in Nizhny Novgorod
Press release
Photo

On August 20, 2025, during the Era of Dreamers festive concert, which opened the jubilee events for the 80th anniversary of Russia’s nuclear industry, an official ceremony was held to appoint the captain of the Yamal nuclear icebreaker. For the first time in history, this position has been taken up by a woman, Marina Starovoitova. The Captain’s badge was presented to Marina Starovoitova by Alexander Barinov, President Emeritus of the Murmansk Atomflot veteran organization.

“To be a captain is to carry on the nuclear fleet traditions, to cherish the crew and the icebreaker. That’s where I see my biggest mission. I’ll undertake it every day. And I very much hope that I will succeed and justify your trust and the trust of my colleagues,” said Marina Starovoitova.

Marina Starovoitova, a graduate of Bryansk State University, was teaching Russian language and literature in the middle classes of a rural school when her acquaintances from the Arctic region told her that the Murmansk Shipping Company was recruiting women to join a ship’s crew. Marina graduated from the Admiral S.O. Makarov State Maritime Academy, specializing as a navigation engineer. By now, she has been working at sea for more than 20 years, six of them in the nuclear fleet. She rose through the ranks from a sailor to Senior Assistant Captain. She is a holder of a Certificate of Merit of Rosatom State Corporation, letter of gratitude of the Russian President and other professional awards.

In 2025, the Russian nuclear industry celebrates its 80th anniversary. On August 20, 1945, the Special Committee on the Utilization of Atomic Energy was established — this date is considered the birthday of the industry.

The anniversary year is defined by three words: pride, inspiration, dreaming. This motto reflects the key values of the nuclear industry: pride for the feat of the founding scientists and engineers, inspiration from the achievements and top performance of the past decades, dreaming as a reference point for the future, aspiration for new discoveries and technologies.

On August 20, 2025, a large-scale gala event Era of Dreamers was held at the Nizhny Novgorod Stadium. The festive evening brought together about 30,000 spectators, including more than 20,000 employees of Rosatom enterprises.

Icebreaker escort is organized to ensure safe navigation along the Northern Sea Route. Russia is the only country in the world with a nuclear icebreaker fleet.

Today, the icebreaker fleet of Atomflot (a part of Rosatom) includes eight nuclear-powered icebreakers: 50 Let Pobedy, Vaigach, Yamal, Taimyr, Arktika (Project 22220), Siberia (Project 22220),  Ural (Project 22220), Yakutia (Project 22220). Two more icebreakers of Project 22220 are under construction, as well as the super-powerful icebreaker Rossiya. Preparations are underway for the construction of the icebreaker Stalingrad (Project 22220).

The Northern Sea Route is the shortest shipping route between Western Eurasia and the Asia-Pacific Region. The NSR administratively begins at the border between the Barents and Kara Sea (Kara Strait) and ends in the Bering Strait (Cape Dezhnev). The route is 5,600 km long. The NSR passes through the seas of the Arctic Ocean (Kara, Laptev, East Siberian, Chukchi). The NSR services the ports in the Arctic and major Siberian rivers. There are currently six major seaports located in the waters of the NSR in the Arctic zone of the Russian Federation: the port of Sabetta, the port of Dickson, the port of Dudinka, the port of Khatanga, the port of Tiksi, and the port of Pevek.

Photo
Вы уже зарегистрировались в Личном кабинете? Получите доступ к созданию своих медиаматериалов по интересующим пресс-релизам и настройте свою персональную рассылку.