Japan Shipyard Orders Continue Decline

By Aiswarya Lakshmi
Tuesday, January 20, 2015

 In December 2014, orders of Japan yard fell 37% year on year, says Japan Ship Exporters’ Association (JSEA). Japanese shipyards specialize in building dry bulk carriers. 

JSEA member yards secured 24 export orders totaling 1,215,100gt in December 2014 which was down from 44 export orders compared to the previous year. 
In December, the orders showed an improvement from November 2014 when JSEA members received 10 orders totaling 338,750gt. The orders include one general cargo ship, seven Handy size bulkers, six Handymax bulkers, three Panamax bulkers, one Capesize bulker, one chip carrier, one products tanker and four LNG carriers.
Due to a tonnage overhang for Panamaxes there was a downward pressure on dry bulk freight rates. Indonesia's ban on raw ore exports, and a lack of Brazilian iron ore cargoes, is discouraging investment appetite for bulkers. 
Categories: Finance Ship Repair & Conversion Ship Sales Shipbuilding Bulk Carriers

Related Stories

Shipbuilding: ONE Singapore Joins the Fleet

Charge It: ‘Electrification’ Momentum Mounts in Maritime

Adani Ports Plans Local Market Comeback After 17 Month Hiatus

Current News

TOTE Promotes Hofeling, Crawford

Russian Yamal LNG Plant Ships First Cargo This Season Via Northern Sea Route

Maersk Pauses Haifa Port Calls

First BYD Electric Cars Delivered to Mexican Port

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News