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China stays top on global shipbuilding ranks, Output accounts for 43.5 percent of the world's total

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China stays top on global shipbuilding ranks, Output accounts for 43.5 percent of the world's total​

Updated: 2023-04-19 18:46

China maintained its top position in shipbuilding in the first quarter of 2023, receiving 15.18 million deadweight tons of new orders, up 53 percent year-on-year.

China's shipbuilding sector continued to take the lead globally in all major indictors including output, new orders and holding orders, the official WeChat account of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology announced on Wednesday.

Output of the country's shipbuilders accounted for 43.5 percent of the world's total, or 9.17 million DWT in the first three months, down 4.6 percent year-on-year. Output is a gauge reflecting the vitality of the sector.

New shipbuilding orders, another major metric of the industry, surged 53 percent year-on-year to 15.18 million DWT during the same period, which accounted for 62.9 percent of the global market.

Holding order volumes came in at 114.52 million DWT by the end of March, rising 15.6 percent from the year prior and taking up 50.8 percent of market share globally.

 

China: Ports, carriers brace for auto export wave by ordering more vessels, increasing throughout​

in Port News 21/04/2023

The world’s largest trading nation already has the world’s largest merchant fleet to transport its goods, but it still lacks a special type of vessel – known as a ro-ro – to match its newfound strength in the emerging field of vehicle exports, industry insiders told the Global Times.

Due to a confluence of factors, China’s car exports exploded during the past three years. In 2022, the country exported some 3.11 million cars, compared with 2 million in 2021 and 1 million in 2020.

However, a lack of roll on, roll off (ro-ro) vessels is keeping the export figure from going up even higher, industry insiders said, with some even describing the issue as a stranglehold.
Chinese auto brands have orders, but lack of enough transport capacity, Zhang Zhanhao, operational director of COSCO Shipping Car Carriers, a leading car shipping company in China, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Some 50 percent of the transport capacity is owned and controlled by companies from Japan and South Korea, two traditional major players in the global car export market, according to Zhang.

“As these companies prioritize the shipment of their own countries’ car exports, new demands from China could not be guaranteed in terms of transport capacity,” Zhang said.
Bullish on the fast growth of the market, Zhang said his company has ordered 24 new ro-ro vessels, which are expected to enter service by the second half of 2024.

“By then, we will have a fleet of roughly 30 ro-ro vessels capable of shipping 700,000 cars abroad annually,” Zhang said.

International ro-ro transport capacity has stayed relatively unchanged since 2018, while in this period China overtook Germany to become the world’s second-largest vehicle exporter, industry experts said, noting a lack of global ro-ro capacity caused by the sudden Chinese success in auto exports.

The market is white hot, and the freight rate has shot up by 800 percent in three years, according to media reports.

China’s car export binge is expected to continue. Per the estimate of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, an industry body, China will see a 20 percent increase in car exports in 2023.
Many think that China has a fair chance of overtaking Japan to become the world’s largest car exporter this year.

Yang Anning, a manager with the Business Development Department of Nansha Automobile Port, told the Global Times on Wednesday that car exports tripled year-on-year in 2022.
In the first quarter, the Nansha Automobile Port, run by the Port of Guangzhou, the world’s fifth-largest port, saw car exports rise by 143 percent to 44,000, according to domestic financial news portal 21jingji.com. New-energy vehicle (NEV) exports expanded by 40 times and exceeded the full-year figure of 2022.

“To cope, we have increased the number of berths used for exports to five from three earlier,” Yang said.

The Nansha Automobile Port, at the mouth of the Pearl River, has become the largest cluster of terminals for ro-ro vessels for wheeled cargo in South China.

As Chinese carriers and auto brands including NEV maker BYD place more orders for such ships, Chinese shipbuilders have benefited, breaking the Japanese and South Korean monopoly of pure car and truck carrier (PCTC), or ro-ro, construction, thanks to the nation’s booming car exports.

Shipbuilding giant China Shipbuilding Trading Co said it had 22 new orders for PCTCs in a statement on March 10, ranking No.1 worldwide.

 

China shipbuilding orders up 53% in the first quarter​

Newly-received shipbuilding orders at Chinese yards were 15.18m dwt in the first three months of this year, increasing 53% on-year.

Katherine Si | Apr 26, 2023

Shipbuilding volume was 9.17m dwt, declining 4.6% year-on-year. Orders on hand were 114.52m dwt, an increase of 15.6% year-on-year.

Shipbuilding export volume was 7.83m dwt, dropping 9.1%; newly-received export shipbuilding orders were 13.38m dwt, growing 56.5%; export orders on hand were 104.21m dwt, increasing 20.3%, accounting for 85.4%, 88.1% and 91% of national volume respectively.

Containerships led China’s delivered vessel volume in the first three months of 2023, while car carriers showed the fastest growth rate in newly-received order pool.

During January to March, China’s shipbuilding output, newly received orders and orders on hand accounted for 43.5%, 62.9% and 50.8% respectively of the global shipbuilding market.

The eighteen major Chinese ship repair yards repaired 995 vessels in the first quarter, an increase of 3.4% year-on-year.

 

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