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NRP Bérrio

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The NRP Bérrio, 2007.
History
Royal Fleet Auxiliary EnsignUnited Kingdom
NameRFA Blue Rover (A270)
OrderedJanuary 1968
Laid down30 December 1968
Launched11 November 1969
Commissioned15 July 1970
Decommissioned23 February 1993
Identification
FatePurchased by the Portuguese Navy and renamed NRP Bérrio on 31 March 1993
Portugal
NameNRP Bérrio
NamesakeCaravel Bérrio
Acquired31 March 1993
HomeportLisbon Naval Base
Identification
StatusIn service
General characteristics
Displacement11522 tons full load
Length461 ft 04 in (140.61 m)
Beam63 ft 02 in (19.25 m)
Draught24 ft 00 in (7.32 m)
Propulsion(orig) 2 x 16 cyl Ruston diesels (post 1974) 2 x 16 cyl Peilstick diesels
Speed19 knots
RangeTemplate:Rover class tanker range
CapacityTemplate:Rover class tanker capacity
ComplementTemplate:Rover class tanker complement
Sensors and
processing systems
Template:Rover class tanker sensors
Electronic warfare
& decoys
Template:Rover class tanker EW
ArmamentTemplate:Rover class tanker armament
Aircraft carriedTemplate:Rover class tanker aircraft

NRP Bérrio (A5210) is a fleet support tanker of the Portuguese Navy.

The ship belongs to the Rover-class tankers, built by the Swan Hunter in Hebburn, England from 1969. From 1970 to 1993, the ship was part of the British Royal Fleet Auxiliary, as the RFA Blue Rover (A270). In 1993, it went to the Portuguese Navy and renamed Bérrio.

In British service, the Blue Rover participated in the Falklands War in 1982.

In the service of the Portuguese Navy, the Bérrio participated in the Operation Crocodile (Operação Crocodilo) in 1998, as part of the Portuguese naval task force that rescued foreign nationals caught in the civil conflicts in Guinea-Bissau and then supported the mediators of the CPLP in the peace talks between the parts in conflict.