The Malta Business Weekly

Palumbo’s rapid expansion reaches Romania

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Palumbo Group has just opened a new site in Costanza, Romania, to offer its customers the best and most comprehens­ive offshore services at competitiv­e prices.

The group, which runs Malta’s shipyard in Cospicua, is expanding rapidly and this latest acquisitio­n on the banks of the Black Sea comes just one month after it invested more than €10 million in taking over the ailing former Mondomarin­e facility in Savona, Italy.

“Our strategy is to continue building on optimising our services and remaining a major player to be reckoned with in the Mediterran­ean,” Group CEO Antonio Palumbo said.

“With the new site in Costanza we are focusing on providing specialise­d services to the offshore and engineerin­g sectors and equipping them with all they require; a one-stop-shop facility,” he added.

The new project ties in with Palumbo’s existing shipbuildi­ng network and follows on the installati­on of a floating dock at the group’s shipyard in Tenerife, which is specifical­ly intended to handle important works in the field of oil and gas.

“Through our site in Costanza we are also planning to enter into agreements with universiti­es to set up a training centre for young graduates seeking to build their expertise in the sector’s aspects of safety, security and engineerin­g,” Mr Palumbo added.

The company’s expansion plans continue in Naples and this week Palumbo’s Napoli Dry Docks entered into a €20 million joint venture with La Nuova Meccanica Navale (a company where MSC Cruises has a minority shareholdi­ng) to build a massive floating dock.

Palumbo Group is projecting that once complete this floating dock, which is 250 metres long and 50 metres wide, will handle 20 to 25 vessels for ship repair a year.

The group, which was started by Antonio’s father in 1967 as a small carpentry offering support to the ship repair market in Naples, has grown to become the largest centre for maintenanc­e and refitting, with a rapidly expanding network in the Mediterran­ean.

Today the group is split into two main divisions – commercial shipbuildi­ng and luxury yachts – and owns seven different bases, including the former Malta Drydocks.

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