China Daily

COSCO Shipping to bulk up with 80 new vessels

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

COSCO Shipping Specialize­d Carriers Co, a unit of State-owned China COSCO Shipping Corp — based in Guangzhou, Guangdong province — will add more than 80 vessels with different functions into its fleet over the next two years, said a senior executive on Tuesday.

Driven by the upgrading and diversific­ation of China’s foreign trade products, these new ships, including 24 car carriers with operationa­l capacities between 7,000 and 8,600 units, 20 pulp carriers and a number of heavy lifting ships, will expand COSCO Shipping Specialize­d Carriers’ fleet capacity to over 10 million deadweight tons by 2026. This expansion will further bolster China’s ability to secure its supply chain.

The majority of the company’s new vessel orders have been placed with domestic shipbuilde­rs, including Xiamen Shipbuildi­ng Industry Co Ltd based in Fujian province and Jiangsu province-based Chengxi Shipyard (Yangzhou) Co Ltd.

Huang Nan, president of COSCO Shipping Specialize­d Carriers, said the company will closely follow the global trend of industrial and supply chain developmen­t, continuing to maintain capacity updates through multiple channels.

As one of the world’s largest specialize­d shipping operators by fleet size, the Chinese firm currently owns more than 140 vessels, including multipurpo­se and heavy lift vessels, semisubmer­sible vessels and asphalt carriers. Its fleet is capable of transporti­ng oversized and overweight cargoes, including oil rigs, engineerin­g and port machinery, locomotive­s, windmills, bridge cranes, and complete equipment to ports of call worldwide.

With China’s auto industry entering a new export era in 2023, COSCO Shipping Specialize­d Carriers transporte­d 248,000 passenger vehicles for export last year, an increase of 228 percent year-onyear. Among these, 86,000 were new energy vehicles.

Huang said that China’s intensifie­d efforts to develop new quality productive forces will generate significan­t market demand for innovative technologi­es, products and services, while also creating fresh investment prospects for exports and foreign investment.

New quality productive forces refer to advanced productivi­ty freed from traditiona­l economic growth modes and productivi­ty developmen­t paths, and feature cuttingedg­e technology, high efficiency and high quality.

In the process of building a digitalize­d supply chain within the shipping industry, Huang said that new quality productive forces are being harnessed through innovative solutions such as artificial intelligen­ce-driven intelligen­t stowage platforms, pioneering smart route products, digital supply chain platforms for the automotive industry and intelligen­t temperatur­e monitoring systems for realtime cargo tracking.

These advancemen­ts are leading the way in enhancing operationa­l efficiency, customer experience and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity in the shipping sector, he added.

Noting that demand for shipping large-size products abroad by Chinese exporters and infrastruc­ture project contractor­s will persist over the long run, Zhang Xiaotao, dean of the School of Internatio­nal Trade and Economics at Central University of Finance and Economics in Beijing, said that the current reshaping of global supply chains offers opportunit­ies for Chinese manufactur­ers to match their capabiliti­es with changing market needs.

Chinese businesses are showing robust competitiv­eness in areas such as electric vehicles, trains, constructi­on machinery, wind turbines and photovolta­ic products, leading to increased acceptance by many countries, said Zhang.

China’s foreign trade expanded 8.7 percent year-on-year to 6.61 trillion yuan ($914 billion) in the first two months, while the country’s exports of mechanical and electrical products amounted to 2.22 trillion yuan, an increase of 11.8 percent on a yearly basis, accounting for 59.1 percent of its total export value, said the General Administra­tion of Customs.

 ?? JI HAIXIN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A COSCO vessel docks at Taicang Port, Jiangsu province.
JI HAIXIN / FOR CHINA DAILY A COSCO vessel docks at Taicang Port, Jiangsu province.

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