China Daily

Luxury passenger ship nearly ready for delivery

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China will soon deliver a worldclass ship to a Swedish company, taking another step closer to China’s aspiration to becoming a supplier of high-end vessels.

State-owned China State Shipbuildi­ng Corp said the ship, Visborg, is the world’s first dual-fuel cruiseferr­y — a luxury passenger ship that can also handle freight and vehicles.

The company said the Visborg will be delivered to its buyer, Rederi AB Gotland, Sweden’s oldest passenger line, in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, before year’s end. A second cruiseferr­y of the same type is under constructi­on for the same company, it noted.

The $145-million ship will be the most expensive civilian vessel ever built by Guangzhou Shipyard Internatio­nal, the statement said.

The cruiseferr­y features fast speed, ecofriendl­iness and a high level of automation and safety. It takes only one operator to control the entire ship if needed, the shipbuilde­r said. There are presidenti­al suites, executive suites and restaurant­s — as well as children’s amusement facilities — on the ship, which will offer passengers a comfortabl­e journey, it added.

The Visborg is 200 meters long, 25.2 m wide, and displaces 18,100 metric tons. It has a cruise speed of 52.7 kilometers per hour and is able to carry 1,730 passengers, along with up to 600 cars. It runs mainly on liquefied natural gas and uses diesel as secondary power.

Rederi AB Gotland is proud of the Visborg as it is one of the world’s most sophistica­ted rollon/roll-off passenger ships with dual-fuel propulsion, Ann-Marie Astrom, chairwoman of the company, said at the ship’s naming ceremony in Guangzhou on Saturday. She added that the cruiseferr­y provides further confirmati­on of the high quality and innovative capacity of the Chinese shipbuildi­ng industry.

Although China is an experience­d builder of naval ships, the nation is a newcomer to cruise ships because of the sophistica­ted technologi­es and complex manufactur­ing techniques required to build them.

The country’s shipbuilde­rs have been striving to develop large cruise ships, and their efforts have borne fruit. CSSC recently launched a major program for the domestic constructi­on of the country’s first large cruise ships.

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