Bangladesh to Become One of Leading Players in Shipbuilding Industry
With two established players, Ananda and Western Marine,
partly booked for the next two years, the buyers are looking for
potential new maker. Friday, 05.Aug.2011, 01:42 (GMT+3)
Bangladesh,Shipbuilding
With two established players, Ananda and Western Marine,
partly booked for the next two years, the buyers are looking for
potential new makers who are capable of doing the job in time and in
budget prices.
âBangladesh shipbuilders havenât seen such a huge attention from global ship owners before,â said C.F Zaman, ex-chief of German-based technical and class certification firm, Germanischer Lloyd.
âEvery week we see officials of new companies arriving in the
country. They are seeking to place orders worth hundreds of millions of
dollars,â Zaman, who advises several firms, told the FE.Zaman
said the better-than-expected performance of Western Marine and Ananda
have raised Bangladeshâs profile as a new ship building destination of
the world. In recent months, the two shipbuilders have delivered eight
ocean going ships to buyers from Western Europe. âThey executed the orders in time. The price was competitive,â he said.
Among the newcomers who have hogged the limelight is Meghnaghat-based new shipbuilder Khan Brothers. âFour foreign shipping firms have visited my company recently. They want to build vessels and dredgers here,â head of Khan Brothers, Tofayel Kabir Khan, told the FE. âWe are still negotiating on prices and the time-frame for executing the orders. We hope we can seal contracts very shortly,â he added.
US-based dredging company, Ellicott Dredges, is negotiating with
another local vessel maker to place orders for seven dredgers worth Tk
7.50 billion, said the owner of the emerging firm.
âSince Bangladesh government has undertaken major river dredging
schemes, the US company sees the country as a potential destination for
dredger supply,â he added, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Ellicott Dredges is one of the oldest dredging companies in the
world, operating in 80 countries and selling over 1,500 dredgers since
1886. It has sold dredging equipment to governments, municipalities,
contractors, port authorities, and marina operators for over 125 years.
Top Indian private power producer Jindal Group is looking for a
Bangladeshi shipmaker to build 34 vessels for carrying coal for its
thermal power stations in the South Asian country, said another
shipbuilder. âAfter a couple of discussions, Jindal now says it was
considering placing orders to Bangladesh. We are hopeful of getting a
big chunk of the orders,â he said, requesting anonymity as he is
yet to sign a deal. The shipmaker said his company is now at the final
stage of negotiation with German shipping company Phoenix Reederei,
which seeks to build eight ocean-going vessels, each weighing 5500 dead
weight tonnes (DWT). âTotal value of the order is $90 million. The order could be signed anytime in the next few months,â he added.
Singaporean state-owned shipping line, ST International, is also
searching a best Bangladeshi shipyard to place orders for making
medium-sized vessels, officials said.
Western Marine has, meanwhile, held talks with a Dubai-based oil rig
supplier to make specialised vessels for the company. Sources said if
signed, it would be one of the largest export orders for the country.
Abdullahel Bari, chairman of Ananda Shipyard, who played a pioneering
role in making the country as an ocean-going shipmaking destination, is
not surprised. âAs we have already proved our capacity, many foreign companies are now scrambling to place orders to Bangladeshi shipmakers,â he told the FE âSee
the volume of recent visits by foreign buyers. This trend means our
ship building is on course to emerge as leading export sector of the
country,â he said.
Bari, a Britain-trained naval architect, said Bangladesh would be a
global player in shipbuilding by 2015, grabbing at least one per cent of
US$400 billion worth of world ship markets.
Bangladeshi shipmakers have so far bagged nearly $700 million worth
of orders from foreign shipping firms since Ananda received the first
order in 2007. They have exported nearly $100 million worth of vessels
till June 2011.
Zaman said growing cost of ship making in the familiar destinations
such as Japan, South Korea, Vietnam and China are driving foreign buyers
to Bangladesh. âFar eastern nations including China and Korea are
no longer interested to make smaller ships, especially those below
20,000dwt capacity,â he said. âIn addition, the quality of the
ships made here has proved to be world standard. We also offer cheap
prices than most other countries,â he added.