Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean yards secure orders from various owners in Asia, Europe, and the Middle East. A Chinese builder meanwhile unveils new designs of four gas carriers of varying capacities.
HD Korea Shipbuilding and Offshore Engineering (KSOE) has been awarded a contract for the construction of two LNG bunkering vessels in a series. The vessels will be handed over to an unnamed European customer following completion.
Each ship will have a total capacity of 18,000 cubic metres. Deliveries are scheduled to commence in November 2027.
Hong Kong shipping company Wah Kwong Maritime Transport Holdings has awarded Chinese shipbuilder the Hengli Group a contract for the construction of two product tankers in a series.
Each ship will have an LOA of 248.8 metres, a beam of 44 metres, a design draught of 13.5 metres, and a deadweight of 114,000. IMO Tier III-compliant engines will deliver a service speed of 14.5 knots and a range of 25,000 nautical miles.
Greek shipping company CM Lemos, through subsidiary Nereus Shipping, has awarded Japan Marine United a contract for the construction of three Suezmax tankers in a series.
All three 158,600DWT vessels will be delivered to Nereus before the end of 2027.
QatarEnergy and China's Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuilding have entered into agreements for the construction of six ultra-large LNG carriers in a series.
Both QatarEnergy and Hudong-Zhonghua claim that the ships will be among the largest LNG carriers to be built. Each will have a total cargo capacity of 271,000 cubic metres, an LOA of 344 metres, a beam of 53.6 metres, a depth of 27.2 metres, and a design draught of 12 metres. The ships will also be fitted with low-speed, dual-fuel engines.
China's Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuilding recently unveiled four new designs of large-capacity gas carriers, each of which has also been awarded approvals by a number of international classification societies.
The new designs are those for an 88,000-cubic-metre ammonia carrier, a 40,000-cubic-metre liquefied CO2 (LCO2) carrier, a 150,000-cubic-metre ultra-large ethane carrier (ULEC), and a 20,000-cubic-metre LNG bunkering vessel.