Loucas Haji-Ioannou (15 September 1927 â 17 December 2008) was a Greek-Cypriot shipping magnate, best known for building one of the worldâÂÂs largest privately owned tanker fleets. Widely referred to as the "Tanker King," he controlled more than 50 vessels by the 1980s and played a dominant role in oil transportation routes during the IranâÂÂIraq War.
Born in the mountain village of Pedoulas in Cyprus, Loucas was the eldest of twelve children and left school at age 17 to support his family. He began as a salesman, then worked as an accountant for his uncle in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. After his uncleâÂÂs death, he launched his own importâÂÂexport enterprise during the 1950s Saudi construction boom and became the sole importer of Heracles and Titan cement.
In 1959, he moved to London and acquired his first vesselâÂÂa 10,500-ton dry cargo ship named *Nedi* after his wife. By 1965, he had amassed a fleet of over 20 cargo vessels. Recognizing the potential of oil transportation, he purchased his first oil tanker in 1969, positioning his firm, Troodos Shipping, for rapid growth.
During the IranâÂÂIraq War of the 1980s, Haji-IoannouâÂÂs willingness to send tankers into hazardous zones, coupled with advanced safety retrofits, enabled him to secure exceptionally high charter rates. This strategic boldness allowed him to recoup tanker costs rapidly and cemented his reputation as the âÂÂTanker King.âÂÂ
By the late 1980s, Loucas controlled a fleet exceeding 50 tankers, responsible for a total deadweight of millions of tonnes.
Loucas Haji-Ioannou married Nedi in 1958; the couple had three children: Polys, Stelios, and Clelia. Each child became prominent in their own right; Polys in shipping, Stelios founding easyJet, and Clelia in investments and philanthropy.
Upon his death in Athens in December 2008 after a prolonged illness, he was remembered as a transformative figure in maritime trade and as a central patriarch of a shipping dynasty.