African, Chinese Shipbuilders Form Partnership

Posted by Eric Haun
Monday, April 20, 2015
Southern African Shipyards (SAS) has entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with China Shipbuilding Trading Company (CSTC), a subsidiary of China State Shipbuilding Corporation, in a union between the largest shipyard in Southern Africa and the largest shipbuilding group in the world.
SAS CEO, Prasheen Maharaj, said, “In terms of the MOU, SAS and CSTC have committed to building a collaborative institutional relationship where we share our experience and expertise, particularly around potential projects which fall under Operation Phakisa.” 
Operation Phakisa was launched by President Jacob Zuma in 2014. One of its two key focus areas is to develop South Africa’s maritime economy in sectors such as marine transport and manufacturing and offshore oil and gas. It includes the expansion of South African port capacity for repair work for oil ships and oil rigs. 
“China and South Africa are both members of the BRICS strategic global alliance and our MOU is a natural outcome to promote each other’s maritime interests,” Maharaj added.
Categories: Naval Architecture Shipbuilding Offshore Energy Ship Repair & Conversion

Related Stories

BIO-UV Completes First Containerized Ballast Water Treatment Deployment

Capesize Values Hit 17-Year High

Chinese Sanctions on Hanwha Put $150B South Korea-US Shipbuilding Plan at Risk

Current News

Tanco Boosts Jeffersonville Port Capacity with $750K Fertilizer Expansion

BIO-UV Completes First Containerized Ballast Water Treatment Deployment

Capesize Values Hit 17-Year High

Maritime and Coastguard Agency Advances Marine Safety with Multiverse Data Upskilling

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News