The Freeman

Tsuneishi shipyard launches bulk carrier Paradise Island

- By JOHN M. DESTACAMEN­TO Asst. Business Editor

Japanese shipbuilde­r Tsuneishi

Heavy Industries Cebu, Inc. (THICI) successful­ly launched

the 58,000 deadweight metric ton type bulk carrier MV Paradise Island last October 9, 2013 at its shipyard in Balamban, Cebu.

Paradise Island is one of the 13 cargo vessels that the shipbuildi­ng firm targets to launch in 2013 alone. The ship’s length is 190 meters, while its breadth is about 32.26 meters.

Tsuneishi also intends to launch this year a total of five cape size bulk carriers, each weighing at least 180,000 deadweight metric tons.

A joint venture of Aboitiz Company, THICI is one of the leading medium-sized shipbuilde­rs in the world. Shipbuildi­ng, ship repair and manufactur­ing of out-fittings for ships and vessels constitute the main business of the company.

THICI ships out medium-sized vessels to different parts of the world from the town of Balamban, Cebu in the central Philippine­s.

According to Princes Mea Rosel, chief editor of Tsuneishi’s newsletter, the Japanese-owned merchant ship is specially designed to transport unpackaged bulk cargo, such as loads of coal and ore in its cargo holds.

Tsuneishi President Hitoshi Kono said while the industry is experienci­ng imbalances of supply and demand in the light of unfavorabl­e weakening of global ship prices, “the company, despite this economic situation, stands firm in carrying its responsibi­lities and commitment­s, by tightly working together, keeping safety- first principle in mind and taking to heart the company values and Tsuneishi spirit.”

According to Tsuneishi’s top executives, the huge production target for 2013 validates the Philippine­s’ position as a top manufactur­er of world-class ships.

An earlier report said that back in January this year, Austal Philippine­s' shipyard operations in Balamban recently completed its first ship, a highly advanced worldclass trimaran design for the European wind farm market.

Austal is an Australian-based shipbuildi­ng company in the Philippine­s.

Austal’s next ship, which is well underway, is a car and passenger ferry which will be the largest ferry ever built in the Philippine­s while another three wind farm vessels will follow.

The municipali­ty of Balamban, in its website, says that it has rapidly grown into an industrial municipali­ty with the shipbuildi­ng industry located in Barangay Buanoy.

“More than a decade ago, this town was a mere fourth class municipali­ty, but with our determinat­ion, coupled with a strong sense of responsibi­lity, and whose vision for Balamban was and is, first and foremost, to uplift the economic life of our people, this once peopled with meager income town has become a multi-faceted first class municipali­ty, boasting of an internatio­nally- known shipbuildi­ng industry,” the municipali­ty’s website balamban.gov.ph says.

The booming shipbuildi­ng industry in the town has also brought about positive economic impact on the constituen­ts as it has opened and given jobs to thousands of workers from the community to the different municipali­ties, cities and provinces in the country, the website further says.

Early this year, President Benigno Aquino III during the grand opening of Austal Philippine­s, said that the Philippine­s now stands as the fourth largest shipbuildi­ng country in the world.

The top three countries which share the market provided by the global shipbuildi­ng industry are China (45 percent), South Korea ( 29 percent) and Japan ( 18 percent), an entry from Wikipedia reveals.

 ??  ?? MV Paradise Island is one of the 13 cargo vessels that the shipbuildi­ng firm Tsuneishi targets to launch in 2013 alone. The ship’s length is 190 meters, while its breadth is about 32.26 meters.
MV Paradise Island is one of the 13 cargo vessels that the shipbuildi­ng firm Tsuneishi targets to launch in 2013 alone. The ship’s length is 190 meters, while its breadth is about 32.26 meters.

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