Shipyard workers sweep the
ground at an assembly area at the Dalian shipyard in Dalian, Liaonin Province.
Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg
|
The government will grant
1,500 yuan ($247) per gross ton for shipping companies to replace obsolete
ships, according to a statement on the transport ministry website yesterday.
The award applies to vessels scrapped in the years 2013 through 2015.
Chinese shipbuilders also
stand to benefit from the subsidy, half of which is awarded only after
replacement orders are placed. China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings
(1101), the nation’s biggest shipyard outside state control, rose 8.9 percent
to close at HK$1.22 in Hong Kong. China Shipping Development Co. (1138), a
Shanghai-based commodities shipping company, gained 0.9 percent to HK$5.35. The
city’s benchmark Hang Seng Index fell 0.3 percent today.
STORY: Boeing Grabs Jumbo
Subsidies From Washington State for 777X Jobs
“The program will be
positive for the shipbuilding sector in the long term,” said Lawrence Li, a
Shanghai-based analyst at UOB Kay-Hian Holdings Ltd. “In the near term, it may
not be material for the shipping industry, as the incentive is not attractive
enough and many cash-strapped shipping firms may not be able to place new
orders amid a bad market.”
New Orders
Under the new program,
ship operators get half the money upon completing scrapping and the rest after
placing new building orders, according to the statement. By comparison, under a
2010 rule, they had to complete scrapping and place new ship orders before
getting any of the subsidy.
The program is “somewhat
disappointing” as it didn’t lower the age requirement for ships that can be
scrapped, which means less tonnage is eligible, according to a note published
today by Credit Suisse Group AG analysts led by Davin Wu.
BLOG: Poor Countries Need
Relief From Climate Change. They Need Electricity More
The Baltic Dry Index
(BDIY), the benchmark for commodity-moving rates, has slumped 41 percent in the
past four years. The monthly index that tracks prices for all types of vessels
dropped 31 percent in November from its peak in September 2008, when the global
financial crisis caused orders to slump, according to Clarkson Plc, the world’s
biggest shipbroker.
Source: business
week. 10 December 2013
No comments:
Post a Comment