China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shipper to order 9 container vessels made in China

- By ZHONG NAN and REN XIAOJIN in Beijing and WANG YING in Shanghai Contact the writers at zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese shipbuilde­rs are outperform­ing their South Korean rivals in constructi­ng high-end mega-containers­hips after further sharpening their manufactur­ing edge and grasping a larger share of the global market.

Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuildi­ng Co confirmed on Tuesday that the company and Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuildi­ng (Group) Co, another Shanghai-based shipyard, together have received a letter of intent from the French group CMACGM SA for nine vessels capable of transporti­ng 22,000 twenty-foot-equivalent-unit containers — the largest carrying capacity in the world.

However, the final order is subject to board approval from both sides.

“The 22,000 TEU-containers­hip will become the world’s largest of its kind once completed, outsizing the current leader, a 21,413-TEU containers­hip made in South Korea. It really is an industrial breakthrou­gh of decades,” said Dong Liwan, a shipbuildi­ng industry researcher at Shanghai Maritime University.

Shipbuilde­rs in China received orders for new vessels with a collective capacity of 8.14 million dead weight metric tons in the first half of 2017, accounting for 31.4 percent of the global market. South Korea’s shipbuildi­ng industry held a 30.6 percent share, data from Beijing-based China Associatio­n of the National Shipbuildi­ng Industry show.

Dong said it is first time Chinese shipyards have topped their South Korean counterpar­ts in the high-value-added mega-containers­hip sector, and the shipbuildi­ng industry as a whole. With the high-profile order of the world largest container vessels falling into Chinese companies’ pocket, the South Korean competitor­s will definitely feel the pain, he said.

“Once the deal is sealed up sooner or later, the French ship owner may choose dual-fuel engines or engines that only consume liquefied natural gas to meet internatio­nal demands for cutting carbon emissions,” said Zhang Xueling, a researcher at the Shanghai Ship and Shipping Research Institute.

Zhang predicted that each ship will cost $160 million to build and the service life can reach 25 to 30 years.

Denmark’s Maersk Line ordered 10 container ships designed to carry 18,000 TEUs from Daewoo Shipbuildi­ng and Marine Engineerin­g Co Ltd in South Korea in 2011. Each vessel cost $185 million.

“Major Chinese shipyards and heavy industry manufactur­ers are keen to acquire European and US maritime design and research firms, because this is a big part of their tactics to gain high-end technologi­es to produce core components and compete with South Korean companies,” said Jin Peng, secretary-general of the CANSI.

Jin said supersized container ships mean lower freight rates and more business opportunit­ies, and fuel-guzzling, highmainte­nance container vessels are no longer required.

Eager to enhance its earning ability, CMA-CGM is gearing up plans to offer a wider range of services in China, with more trading companies keen to move to emerging markets and to benefit from booming bilateral trade, preferenti­al trade tariffs and investment opportunit­ies.

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