The Swedish Sea Rescue Society (Swedish: Sjöräddningssällskapet, SSRS), formally the Swedish Society for the Saving of Shipwrecked Persons (Swedish: Svenska Sällskapet för Räddning af Skeppsbrutne) is a Swedish voluntary organisation that works with maritime search and rescue on Swedish lakes and seas. The society runs 70 lifeboat stations, with over 200 rescue vessels and over 2100 volunteers. Of these, more than 300 are on call at any given moment, and can respond to an emergency call within 15 minutes. It is a member of the International Maritime Rescue Federation (IMRF)
The society was founded in 1907 at the Hotel Rydberg in Stockholm. The organisation is completely non-profit, and receives no government funding but is instead funded entirely by donations and membership fees. SSRS carries out more than 70% of all emergency calls in Sweden and its territorial waters.
Under an agreement with the Swedish Maritime Administration the purpose of the society is:
to maintain an interest in maritime search and rescueto suggest measures to improve service in this areato manage individual search and rescue operations within Swedish watersThe society also provides technical advice in areas where there may not be an immediate danger.
Between 1982 and 1991 the society produced its own coins, with a face value of 25 Swedish kronor. Since 2001 money has been received from the Swedish Postcode Lottery, which in 2009 totalled 21.5 million Swedish crowns.
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