Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: China fast becoming the world's shipyard
Asia Finest Discussion Forum > Asian Culture > Chinese Chat > Chinese Serious Talk
XiaoZhang
QUOTE
China fast becoming the world's shipyard

4 hours ago

DALIAN, China (AFP) — In a drydock at a shipyard in northeast China's Dalian city, a 300,000-tonne oil tanker is ready for delivery to Maersk, its hull painted in the Danish shipping company's trademark blue.

Nearby, an offshore drilling platform has been constructed according to precise specifications from US company Noble.

Both are examples of China's growing success as a shipbuilding nation and its progress towards the goal of becoming number one in the industry by 2015.

"Last year, the order books at Chinese shipyards surpassed those of Japan, to be second only to South Korea," said Li Cheng, assistant general manager of Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Co.

The company runs the eighth largest shipyard in the world, and last year delivered 32 vessels totalling three million deadweight tonnes.

In terms of new orders, China was actually number one last year, totalling 98.5 million deadweight tonnes, or 42 percent of the global total, according to the Beijing government.

"Chinese shipyards have had their business boosted by the very fast growth of the local economy, which has fuelled demand for container ships and other vessels," said Li. "If it continues like this, we'll overtake South Korea."

Chances are it will indeed continue like this. Dalian shipyard, located in the Gulf of Bohai, has its order books filled right until 2011.

The expansion of the Chinese economy -- leading to strong growth in both exports and imports -- is not the only factor behind this success.

Equally important is the global boom in shipping. Eighty percent of the output of China's shipyards is exported.

The result is that China's share of the global market has expanded from 18 percent in 2006 to 23 percent last year, while South Korea and Japan account for roughly 35 percent each, according to research institute Clarkson.

"It's not impossible that it will eventually take up the leadership position (ahead of South Korea)," said Caroline Huot, general manager of Total Lubmarine for the Asia Pacific.

"It's got the will, no doubt. There's a real can-do attitude in China."

She added the government offers strong support for the shipbuilding industry, investing large amounts of money in new shipyards.

The industry is dominated by two huge state-owned enterprises: China State Shipbuilding Corporation and China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation, the parent of the Dalian company.

But in recent years, it has also seen a large number of new entrants, in the form of smaller shipyards run by local governments or private groups, or set up as joint ventures.

There are now 3,000 of these smaller shipyards, up from just 350 a decade ago.

At the same time, Chinese shipyards have succeeded in building up a good reputation.

"The Chinese companies are very concerned about safety and the environment. They are large and extremely professional enterprises, and they're just as good as their counterparts in the United States or Norway," said Huot.

The Dalian shipyard has clients across the globe, from Gear Bulk, 60 percent Norwegian-owned, to Sweden's Stena AB and customers in Greece and Iran.

To keep up its competitive advantage, the Dalian shipyard now spends heavily on research and development and the continued improvement of the infrastructure.

"We're still cheap compared with South Korea and Japan, but we have to think about the future and take steps to improve our competitiveness," said Li.


Source
froglee
QUOTE(XiaoZhang @ Mar 2 2008, 06:46 PM) [snapback]3540063[/snapback]


Just like Great Britain and the United States before, China is laying the fundation become a superpower by building up its shipbuilding industry. If China has a powerful shipbuilding industry, it certain can build a strong navy in the future.
kennyboy
QUOTE(froglee @ Mar 3 2008, 12:38 AM) [snapback]3541114[/snapback]
Just like Great Britain and the United States before, China is laying the fundation become a superpower by building up its shipbuilding industry. If China has a powerful shipbuilding industry, it certain can build a strong navy in the future.


China's shipyards are already building pretty good and decent submarines, diesel and nuclear powered submarines. The diesel powered Song, Yuan class are modern and sophiscated, and the nuclear powered Type 093, even though still inferior to the American best Seawolf and Virginia submarines, is somewhat comparable to the Los Angeles class nuclear submarines. They are armed with pretty good weapons, Russian club missiles, modern chinese yu-6 acoustic/wire/wave homing torpedos.

Ecthelion
If only China had oil deposits like Russia... then it could really outlast any nation in a prolonged conflict.
Hafiz
QUOTE(Ecthelion @ Mar 4 2008, 03:00 AM) [snapback]3543513[/snapback]
If only China had oil deposits like Russia... then it could really outlast any nation in a prolonged conflict.


China should work on developing alternative energy.
sinraptor
I heard that China, Japan and South Korea alone received 86% of the world's ship orders in 2007
Tehan
Why do we still need ships? I thought aeroplanes are the way to go?
sinraptor
QUOTE(Tehan @ Oct 25 2008, 04:36 PM) [snapback]3982751[/snapback]
Why do we still need ships? I thought aeroplanes are the way to go?

planes can't carry most extremely heavy equipment
WarEngineer
ship = move a $hit load of stuff cheaply and slowly

plane = move a tiny bit of stuff expensively and fast

both very useful
Tehan
QUOTE(sinraptor @ Oct 25 2008, 10:59 PM) [snapback]3983014[/snapback]
planes can't carry most extremely heavy equipment


Fair point.
BigBenChow
QUOTE(Tehan @ Oct 26 2008, 07:36 AM) [snapback]3982751[/snapback]
Why do we still need ships? I thought aeroplanes are the way to go?


For transporting goods and not people.
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2012 Invision Power Services, Inc.