The company that owns the Svitzer Korsakov ice-class tug vessel seized by Somali pirates on February 1 confirmed on Tuesday that the vessel has been released, RIA Novosti reports.
Svitzer spokesman Patrick Adamson told RIA Novosti the ship and crew had been released, but gave no details on the ransom paid to the pirates.
International news agencies cited officials as saying $700,000 had been paid.
The Danish-owned vessel had four Russian crew members, a British captain, and an Irish engineer on board.
The pirates operating in Somalia's northern region of Puntland captured the Russian ship off the Horn of Africa and took the crew hostage during a voyage from St. Petersburg, around Africa, to Russia's Far Eastern island of Sakhalin, where it was intended for use in oil and natural gas projects.
The company that owns the tugboat - Svitzer Wijsmuller Sakhalin Ltd. - has been contracted by Sakhalin Energy, the operator of a vast oil and gas project off Sakhalin, to transport ships to the region.