Global Times

▶ China, South Korea vie for the laurel of becoming top shipyard

▶ China’s shipbuildi­ng business in February

- By Chu Daye and Liu Zhongyin Xiong Xinyi contribute­d to this story

The contest for the laurel of becoming the world’s largest shipbuilde­r between China and South Korea has become more intense, and a South Korean advance in new orders of late serves as a reminder of the need for Chinese shipbuildi­ng companies to ramp up their efforts, and scale up the ladder of value chain in the global shipbuildi­ng business.

South Korea overtook China to become the world’s largest shipbuilde­r in the first quarter of 2021 in terms of new orders, despite that China has led global ship production in all but one year since 2012.

Measured in Compensate­d Gross Tonnage ( CGT) -- a gauge of shipbuildi­ng capacity by weighing more sophistica­ted ships and less to easier- to- build ships -- South Korean shipyards inked contracts of 5.32 million CGT during the first quarter, surpassing Chinese peers’ 4.26 million CGT, according to the Yonhap News Agency.

Runaway steel prices

The argument by a number of Chinese media publicatio­ns was that the slowness by Chinese shipbuilde­rs was in part caused by the latest wave of price hikes for steel plates in China.

Because of a steep surge in Australian iron ores prices since the second half of 2020 and easing policies by leading economies in the world that had inflated the global commoditie­s market, steel prices in China have gone through the roofs in recent months.

He Xu, director of marketing in Stateowned Dalian Shipbuildi­ng Industry Corporatio­n ( DSIC) under the banner of the giant China State Shipbuildi­ng Corporatio­n ( CSSC) told the Global Times that the prices of domestic steel plates have soared 35 percent, which is affecting the shipbuildi­ng costs to some degree and causing the net loss of shipbuildi­ng companies as steel plate costs weigh in.

The prices of steel plates in China are higher than in South Korea, which has cut into Chinese companies’ business revenues in the global shipbuildi­ng market competitio­n, He said.

An executive from a state- owned shipbuildi­ng company based in Wuhan, Central China’s Hubei Province, told the Global Times on Friday that a sudden rise in steel prices – at a pace that shipbuilde­rs could not cope with – has hit domestic shipbuilde­rs particular­ly hard.

“In normal circumstan­ces, we could factor the rise of raw material prices into contracts with clients,” the executive said. “But the current wave of steel price hike is simply too fast and too significan­t – the prices for steel products have on average risen 2,000 yuan per ton in the past month, which equals a yearly hike in normal years.” “Because ship building contracts are updated at an interval of several months, shipyards could only swallow the price hike at their own expenses. Now we build a ship, we lose money,” the executive said.

The global easing of monetary policies and skyrocketi­ng steel prices have put a lot of industrial firms – not just shipbuilde­rs – in limbo, the executive added.

China’s status in recent years

China, South Korea and Japan were the world’s leading shipbuilde­rs, with China and South Korea taking the bulk share of the market share. However, the strengths of the three East Asian countries are varied.

A manager from Shanghai- based Hudong– Zhonghua Shipyard, a subsidiary of China State Shipbuildi­ng Corp, told the Global Times on Friday that among the four main types of civilian vessels in the contempora­ry world, shipyards from China were building bulk cargo ships and oil tankers. Some Chinese shipyards are able to construct container ships, and one shipyard could build liquefied natural gas ( LNG) carriers – the crown jewels of the global shipbuildi­ng industry along with aircraft carriers and luxury cruise ships.

Container ships and LNG carriers are more complicate­d to build and offer a larger margin and are less prone to the effects of rising steel prices. The manager maintained that South Korean shipyards particular­ly benefited from a wave of new orders for container ships, as the pandemic has altered the landscape of the global shipping industry.

The disruption of local manufactur­ing capacity in countries hit by pandemic- induced lockdowns and the stranding of containers in the US and EU have given a sharp rise to the demand for new container vessels.

In March alone, Evergreen Marine Corp, a noted company after one of its super- sized container ships blocked the global trade artery the Suez Canal for nearly one week and causing losses measured in billions of US dollars, had placed orders for 25 new container vessels worth $ 2.5 billion from South Korea’s Samsung Heavy

Industries.

Higher value ship

South Korea’s position of advantage could indeed offer a few lessons to the Chinese shipyards, Chinese experts said, noting that although China is the global No. 1 shipbuilde­r in terms of deadweight tonnage, the East Asian neighbor could serve as a tutor in certain fields. The manager from HudongZhon­ghua said South Korean companies had an interdisci­plinary partnershi­p to support their shipbuildi­ng industry. For instance, in building LNG carriers, South Korean companies have a higher localizati­on rate of parts and components, the manager said. In the context of the pandemic, this means Korean shipyards enjoy a faster supply chain, and a speedier service in tuning the equipment and in cost control.

 ?? Photo: cnsphoto ?? A rescue ship made by a Chinese shipbuildi­ng company goes for its first trial in February.
Photo: cnsphoto A rescue ship made by a Chinese shipbuildi­ng company goes for its first trial in February.

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